Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Across the developing world, unprecedented levels of criminal violence led by non-state
armed groups have coincided with alarming rates of violence against women (VAW). In this book
project, I develop a theoretical framework that helps explain how non-state armed groups’ territorial
control make women more vulnerable to gendered violence and its consequences for women’s
political participation. I argue that criminal groups’ territorial control increases women’s vulnerability
to gendered violence in and outside the home, which undermines women’s likelihood of engaging in
politics. I test my hypotheses in the context of gang’s territorial control in El Salvador, relying on
quantitative and qualitative data. The quantitative analyses use data from two large-scale original
surveys at the neighborhood level and a nationally representative survey of VAW. These data allow
me to employ survey experiments and advanced statistical techniques to systematically examine the
links between gangs’ territorial control, VAW, and women’s political participation.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 8/27/19 → 12/13/19 |
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