Money, Economic Abuse, and Food Insecurity: A Qualitative Study among Young Nigerian Women with a History of Intimate Partner Violence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Sample
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Measures
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Gender Inequities Exacerbate Economic Vulnerability
3.1.1. Inequitable Division of Household Chores
There are more opportunities for (educating) boys than girls. … Boys are usually left from doing house chores as well, but a girl must do all chores before leaving the house.ID 8
Boys have better opportunities (to complete their education) than girls… The family expects that the girl child should be able to do house chores, boys are sometimes excluded.ID 9
3.1.2. Inequitable Financial Support for Girls’ Education and Training
Girls are treated differently at home, in the society and everywhere. If I were a boy, even considering that I have a child, they would have supported me to do my ‘freedom’ (completion and graduation from vocational training). They will consider that I am a man and will quickly do it for me. The reason why there is delay in my ‘freedom’ is because I am a girl.ID 20
People treat girls differently from boys. In my case, when I ask my father for something he will not give me most times, but I have a younger brother that gets anything he wants. The society give more to boys than girls, especially in terms of education. People believe that a girl will end her life in the kitchen no matter her level of education. For this reason, they tend to invest more in boys’ education. The society believes a girl should be good with house chores, neat, hardworking, respectful, jovial.ID 25
3.1.3. Inequities in Education and Work Opportunities
Boys have more opportunities to make money than girls …(including) jobs that bring a lot of money.ID 14
Boys have better opportunities than girls, there are some jobs that a boy can do that a girl cannot do. Also, sometimes some jobs are left solely for boys.ID 9
3.2. Financial Dependence on Male Partnerships
Girls sometimes get favor from men. Some men will help you not necessarily because they are kind, but because they want to have a relationship with you.ID 11
He told my mother and me to contact him anytime I have a financial challenge in school that he was ready to help. After few months it was time to register for WAEC (standardized exam taken by students in order to graduate from secondary education). My parents couldn’t come up with the payment, so I was chased out of school for non-payment of government levy and other levies that cost NGN 5500 (about USD 15). I was at home for one week. One day I was searching my phone and I saw his number. I called him that I needed his help since he had promised to help me financially when I have a need for my education. He asked me to come and meet him and he gave me the money. I paid the fees with the money and I appreciated him. (This participant was subsequently pressured into having an unwanted relationship with the man who provided funds for her education to clear her “debt” and later became pregnant).ID 25
3.3. Economic Abuse
3.3.1. Experiencing Food Deprivation
The times that we don’t have food is more common. When my husband was jobless, we would eat twice…. Now that he has a job, he doesn’t give money for feeding. We eat whatever we can in a day, even if it is once.ID 18
He doesn’t buy food in the house; I figure out how we eat. I wasn’t working then but I find a way to manage. If he ever gives money for food, it was never enough. He can drop NGN 300 (USD 0.80) or NGN 200 (USD 0.55). He only does this when he is happy. If he ever gives me NGN 500 (USD 1.38) for feeding, it may be all for the next one week.ID 21
When I was with my husband, there are times he gives me money for food and I sort things out at other times. Sometimes he will not give me money for feeding and he will tell me the kind of food I should prepare. I used to refuse him any special food at that time, I only cook what I can afford from the money that my father, mother, and grandma give me.ID 13
Money causes fight a lot. He will ask me to cook for him without dropping any money or dropping very little. If I complain that what he gave is too small, he will collect it back and that is all. If I don’t cook the food, it is trouble. If he gave instruction that I should cook rice and boiled egg and I don’t add egg because the money I have is not enough, that is another trouble.ID 21
He may ask me to cook when he didn’t give me any money. If he returns and didn’t get food, he may be angry. He can start to shout on me and get really angry. If I explain that I don’t have money, he will insist I have money. He can start to shout and threaten to lock me out if he goes out to eat. Truly, he will lock me out and I will go and sleep in his mother’s house. His mother’s house is at (a nearby community). His mother will follow me in the morning to come and settle the quarrel.ID 14
3.3.2. Sexual Favors in Exchange for Financial Support
I had a man that will not give me money unless he sleeps with me…We quarrel about money a lot because if I ask him for money, he will not give me. If I need money from him, I ensure I get it when he wants to have sex with me, because that is the only way I am sure he will give me without a blink.ID 11
If I refused to have sex with him, he will not give me and the child feeding allowance. Also, if you have sex with him today, that does not stop him from beating you tomorrow. Sometimes, when he wants to have sex with me, he will ask me for how much I want. Many times, I refuse his offer and tell him I am not a prostitute. Other times when I need money badly, I will (have sex) to collect the money from him or ask him to buy me Maltina (a beverage) and milk.ID 21
Financial dependence has turned some girls into prostitutes, some have contracted HIV.ID 5
3.4. Pregnancy and IPV
I don’t know his thought. (I think) he intentionally got me pregnant because of the ways boys were always around me.ID 21
No, I didn’t let him know before I took the method (birth control method). If I told him, he wouldn’t have allowed me.ID 16
He used to pressure me to get pregnant and that was how the pregnancy happened.ID 13
He beat me when I was about seven months pregnant. I was tired and he asked me to cook for him. I told him that I was sick and couldn’t cook the food. My neighbor came out and appealed to me to cook the food. When I got up to cook the food, he stopped me that he doesn’t want me to cook for him anymore. He went ahead to start cooking. When he came back to the room, he punched me on my stomach. The beating was so much. I angrily went to remove what he was cooking and poured it on him. This kind of incidents when he beats me was a common thing in our relationship then. I got used to it at a point. His eldest sibling came and intervened. He appealed that we should settle and that I should forgive his attitude.ID 21
When I suspected I was pregnant, I went to a chemist in front of my shop for pregnancy test and I told my boyfriend. He later took me to a hospital and I overheard when he was telling the doctor about abortion, I jumped up from the bed and ran away. After that he poisoned my drink, not knowing I didn’t take it. Few days later, he called me to ask if I have seen any blood. I told him no and since then I will not eat any food or drink he gives me. That was how we started real fight and he really abused me.ID 5
3.5. Pregnancy and Diminished Financial Support from a Male Partner
To outsiders, he is a good person but not at home. He was good to me too before I moved to his house. You can’t know the character of a man when you are still dating or don’t have a child, until you are in his house…Then, he took me out, gave me money and bought things for me. But nothing of such happens again now. (The male partner was having an affair with another woman the entire time the participant was dating him. The participant later got pregnant and was no longer supported financially by the male partner).ID 18
We lived together for one year and six months. When we were together, he took care of me, he buys things for me. He was very caring for me in pregnancy till I was delivered of my child.ID 21
Some of the challenges I face is money. When I ask my husband for money to buy things for my daughter, he will not give me…When our daughter has not eaten and there is no food at home to give her, my husband will keep telling me to breastfeed her. This is a girl that is not satisfied with breast milk anymore.ID 12
I wasn’t working initially, my pregnancy period and after. So, I was solely dependent on him for money. If he doesn’t drop money, I will not eat. When I was pregnant, I will be at home hungry and he will be giving people money.ID 10
When I was pregnant, I called him that there was no money to feed. That time, I only eat once a day because no one will feed me. My mother didn’t have money then to even support me. Her shop was empty. Sometimes, my siblings will not go to school because there was no money to give them. If I called him that I needed money, he will just tell me he was coming and he will not. One day my friend told me he saw him in the next street, so I went there to meet him. I asked him why he didn’t send money to me. He gave me NGN 500 (USD 1.20). I told him it was not enough but he ignored me.ID 25
3.6. Pregnancy and Childcare Inhibiting Economic Opportunities
Firstly, I am not free among my friends, because I will be the only one carrying a baby when we are all together. I hide from my friends. It affected my education. If I didn’t have a child, I would have written my exam again. Thirdly, it affected my finance. I can’t move around to get a job because I can’t leave a baby.ID 25
If I was a boy, I would have more opportunity to ‘hustle’ and work for money. Boys are not disturbed by carrying children around.ID 12
This pregnancy has cost me a lot. First, when I wanted to quit my current job, I was told employment cannot be given to a pregnant person. I also wanted to rewrite my secondary school exam, but I was told to wait till after my delivery. I wish to go back to school too but I was told to wait ‘til I am delivered of the baby.ID 9
I ended my education because of the pregnancy. The pregnancy led to a quarrel between my eldest sibling and me ‘til today. He stopped being involved in my life since I got pregnant. My eldest sibling is a graduate and dislikes an uneducated person. He has not seen my husband before. He is not aware that I am back to my mother’s place. He told me that the only thing that will make him involved with me again is if I am graduating from my apprenticeship or go back to school.ID 16
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Frequency (%) n = 25 |
---|---|
Age (years) | |
18–19 | 6 (24) |
20–22 | 11 (44) |
23–25 | 6 (24) |
26–28 | 2 (8) |
Level of Education | |
No Formal Education | 1 (4) |
Primary (Elementary) | 3 (12) |
Incomplete Secondary | 8 (32) |
Secondary (Middle School) | 10 (40) |
University/College | 3 (12) |
Marital Status | |
Single/Never Married | 3 (12) |
Cohabiting and Not Married | 14 (56) |
Married/Common Law | 8 (32) |
Have Children | |
Yes | 17 (68) |
No | 8 (32) |
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Frost, E.L.; Fawole, O.I.; Okedare, O.O.; Salawu, M.M.; Kiene, S.M.; Augusto, C.; Reed, E. Money, Economic Abuse, and Food Insecurity: A Qualitative Study among Young Nigerian Women with a History of Intimate Partner Violence. Adolescents 2023, 3, 330-342. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020023
Frost EL, Fawole OI, Okedare OO, Salawu MM, Kiene SM, Augusto C, Reed E. Money, Economic Abuse, and Food Insecurity: A Qualitative Study among Young Nigerian Women with a History of Intimate Partner Violence. Adolescents. 2023; 3(2):330-342. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020023
Chicago/Turabian StyleFrost, Elizabeth L., Olufunmilayo I. Fawole, Omowumi O. Okedare, Mobolaji M. Salawu, Susan M. Kiene, Camarina Augusto, and Elizabeth Reed. 2023. "Money, Economic Abuse, and Food Insecurity: A Qualitative Study among Young Nigerian Women with a History of Intimate Partner Violence" Adolescents 3, no. 2: 330-342. https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents3020023