All Rights Reserved
AccessEcon LLC 2006, 2008.
Powered by MinhViet JSC

 
Aparna Mathur and Sita N Slavov
 
''The impact of legislative change on reported domestic violence against women in India''
( 2017, Vol. 37 No.4 )
 
 
This paper investigates whether two legislative changes aimed at empowering women did in fact lower the risk of domestic violence for women in India. We use the National Family Health Survey, a nationally representative household dataset to explore this issue. We exploit a legislative change geared at improving the political representation of women by reserving at least one-third of seats in the local Panchayats for women. The change to representation was implemented at different dates depending on the timing of elections. The second change is a natural experiment wherein five states made amendments to their inheritance laws allowing daughters equal status as sons in the right to inherit the joint property of the father. We use this arguably exogenous variation to study whether the improvement in women's autonomy in these states as a result of the passage of this law had any impact on the likelihood that they report being victims of domestic abuse. Our results suggest that improved representation increased the reported probability of violence. There are two competing explanations for these results. First, women may have experienced retaliation by men who feared the erosion of their power and opposed the policy change. Second, the policy change may have made women more willing to report violence to interviewers.
 
 
Keywords: domestic violence; India
JEL: J1 - Demographic Economics: General
O1 - Economic Development: General
 
Manuscript Received : Mar 09 2017 Manuscript Accepted : Nov 19 2017

  This abstract has been downloaded 1359 times                The Full PDF of this paper has been downloaded 166339 times