Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data

Introduction Concerns emerged over the escalation of intimate partner violence (IPV) as many governments imposed COVID-19 lockdown measures. This paper examined the lethality trends, gender contexts and sources of fatal IPV during the prelockdown, lockdown and postlockdown years (2019–2021) in Niger...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vitalis U Ukoji, Vitus N Ukoji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024-04-01
Series:BMJ Public Health
Online Access:https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000633.full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832583189620588544
author Vitalis U Ukoji
Vitus N Ukoji
author_facet Vitalis U Ukoji
Vitus N Ukoji
author_sort Vitalis U Ukoji
collection DOAJ
description Introduction Concerns emerged over the escalation of intimate partner violence (IPV) as many governments imposed COVID-19 lockdown measures. This paper examined the lethality trends, gender contexts and sources of fatal IPV during the prelockdown, lockdown and postlockdown years (2019–2021) in Nigeria. This research aims to shed light on the impact of the pandemic lockdown on IPV-related mortalities.Methods The study used secondary data from the Nigeria Watch database, an online resource on lethal violence and human security in Nigeria. It relied on IPV datasets extracted and analysed descriptively at the univariate level.Results Results indicate a steady increase in IPV-related mortalities, with 205 fatalities—62 in 2019, 69 in 2020 and 74 in 2021—resulting from 180 IPV incidents. Males were the main protagonists, as the majority of IPV victims were women, including female spouses (51%) and female lovers (23%), compared with male spouses (18%) and male lovers (7%). A trend analysis of IPV-related fatalities showed that the worst affected states are in southern Nigeria, with Lagos recording the most cases. Apart from the undefined causes of IPV-related fatalities, more deaths emanated from arguments between intimate partners (50) and infidelity (37). Aside from other reasons, most victims died from dangerous weapons (46) and battering (27).Conclusion This paper underscores the steady increase in IPV-related deaths year over year, not just during the COVID-19 lockdown period, and highlights the importance of policy and practise to prevent and respond to IPV incidents.
format Article
id doaj-art-c36e4991641740009dd51a599f5da0e6
institution Kabale University
issn 2753-4294
language English
publishDate 2024-04-01
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format Article
series BMJ Public Health
spelling doaj-art-c36e4991641740009dd51a599f5da0e62025-01-29T04:00:08ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Public Health2753-42942024-04-012110.1136/bmjph-2023-000633Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary dataVitalis U Ukoji0Vitus N Ukoji1Department of Sociology, Federal University Lokoja, Lokoja, Kogi, NigeriaUniversity of Ibadan, Ibadan, NigeriaIntroduction Concerns emerged over the escalation of intimate partner violence (IPV) as many governments imposed COVID-19 lockdown measures. This paper examined the lethality trends, gender contexts and sources of fatal IPV during the prelockdown, lockdown and postlockdown years (2019–2021) in Nigeria. This research aims to shed light on the impact of the pandemic lockdown on IPV-related mortalities.Methods The study used secondary data from the Nigeria Watch database, an online resource on lethal violence and human security in Nigeria. It relied on IPV datasets extracted and analysed descriptively at the univariate level.Results Results indicate a steady increase in IPV-related mortalities, with 205 fatalities—62 in 2019, 69 in 2020 and 74 in 2021—resulting from 180 IPV incidents. Males were the main protagonists, as the majority of IPV victims were women, including female spouses (51%) and female lovers (23%), compared with male spouses (18%) and male lovers (7%). A trend analysis of IPV-related fatalities showed that the worst affected states are in southern Nigeria, with Lagos recording the most cases. Apart from the undefined causes of IPV-related fatalities, more deaths emanated from arguments between intimate partners (50) and infidelity (37). Aside from other reasons, most victims died from dangerous weapons (46) and battering (27).Conclusion This paper underscores the steady increase in IPV-related deaths year over year, not just during the COVID-19 lockdown period, and highlights the importance of policy and practise to prevent and respond to IPV incidents.https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000633.full
spellingShingle Vitalis U Ukoji
Vitus N Ukoji
Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
BMJ Public Health
title Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
title_full Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
title_fullStr Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
title_full_unstemmed Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
title_short Lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 lockdown in Nigeria: evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
title_sort lethal intimate partner violence and gendered dimensions of the covid 19 lockdown in nigeria evidence from a descriptive analysis of secondary data
url https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000633.full
work_keys_str_mv AT vitalisuukoji lethalintimatepartnerviolenceandgendereddimensionsofthecovid19lockdowninnigeriaevidencefromadescriptiveanalysisofsecondarydata
AT vitusnukoji lethalintimatepartnerviolenceandgendereddimensionsofthecovid19lockdowninnigeriaevidencefromadescriptiveanalysisofsecondarydata