Domestic Violence Against Married Dalit Women in Pokhara Metropolitan City, Kaski, Nepal
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Department of Sociology
Abstract
This study aimed to explore and analyze the forms, causes, consequences, and
coping strategies of domestic violence against married Dalit women in Pokhara
Metropolitan City (PMC), Kaski, Nepal. This research is guided by feminist standpoint
theory, socialist feminism, and power theory. Accordingly, forty-three married Dalit
survivor women were selected (Kami, Damai, Sarki, and Gaine) from six wards of PMC
aged 15 to 61, who have been suffering from domestic violence. The methodology was
based on the use of exploratory and descriptive research design through a purposive
sampling method. Accordingly, tools and techniques for data collection used in this study
included forty-three in-depth interviews, observation, and fourteen key informant
interviews with the identified respondents. The nature of the research was qualitative as
well as narrative analysis.
The findings revealed that there are mainly three forms of violence found in the
survivor woman's life, such as physical, emotional/psychological, and sexual.
Accordingly, out of the forty-three survivor women, more than half of them were abused
by physical violence, about two-fifths of them were abused by emotional/psychological
violence (some of them included under the physical violence category as well), and about
one-fourth of them were sexually abused. The main causes of violence are the low
economic and educational status of the survivor woman and her husband; alcoholic
nature of husband, husband's suspicion towards his wife, sexual dissatisfaction of
husband, early marriage, and extra-marital relationship that were the major factors that
facilitated the emergence of domestic violence to the married Dalit women's life. Thus,
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the main consequences of survivor women are continued physical injury, gynecological
problems, anxiety, mental health problems, panic attacks, suicide attempts, and often the
resultant flow of such problems passed down to the children. I found that the majority of
the survivor women tried to dismiss and usually ignore the violence. Instead, they
persuaded themselves by crying, engaged in housework, wage labor, and taking care of
innocent children, and were reluctant to follow the required series of steps including
government bills, laws/acts and regulations, and the perpetrators‟ attention to the survivor
women.
The findings of this study well highlighted the fact that survivor women usually
avoid protesting against their husband‟s violence, mainly because they are unaware of
their basic rights and legal provisions. Therefore, the findings of this research are
considered to be essential for analyzing, comparing, and extracting the overall situation
of violence faced by married Dalit women in Pokhara Metrpolitan City, Kaski, which is
equally important for proper policy formulation and planning as they vary in nature. For
example, the majority of the survivor women kept silent, few women seek for help from
neighbors/Tol Development Committee, and also few women reach to maternal home.
Moreover, the survivor-woman tries to self-negotiate all kinds of torture instead of
defending the perpetrator and filing the case to the concerned authority. The findings of
this study have aided sociological studies, particularly those focusing on married Dalit
women's issues. The socioeconomic and educational status of women and their
perpetrators has a direct impact on the extent and types of violence they face. The
findings emphasize the importance of social order and structural approaches to changing
norms as well as improving women's status because the coping strategies in place
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provided by legal provisions do not appear to be effective. Study findings also supported
the fact that patriarchal social structure, established social norms, values and unequal
power relation between husband and wife are the reason of domestic violence among
married Dalit women.Thus findings of this study are thought imperative in formulating
appropriate policies and implementing proper planning.