2017
DOI: 10.1037/vio0000110
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Women’s narratives of economic abuse and financial strategies in Britain and South Asia.

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Cited by 34 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…In this article, we sought to describe and analyze the complex social processes involved in young married women’s negotiations over cash in the rural Nepali household. In line with previous literature on women’s strategies for control over money ( Chowbey, 2017 , Eroglu, 2009 , Kabeer, 1997 ), financial secrecy was an important means of exerting agency and resisting total economic dependency in a context where women’s dependent status served as strong deterrents to overt confrontation with other household members ( Jack et al, 2010 , Mandelbaum, 1993 ). In contrast to previous accounts, we found a central role for intergenerational power dynamics, where husbands and daughters-in-law acted as allies in a struggle for financial power against the financial guardian of the household.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
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“…In this article, we sought to describe and analyze the complex social processes involved in young married women’s negotiations over cash in the rural Nepali household. In line with previous literature on women’s strategies for control over money ( Chowbey, 2017 , Eroglu, 2009 , Kabeer, 1997 ), financial secrecy was an important means of exerting agency and resisting total economic dependency in a context where women’s dependent status served as strong deterrents to overt confrontation with other household members ( Jack et al, 2010 , Mandelbaum, 1993 ). In contrast to previous accounts, we found a central role for intergenerational power dynamics, where husbands and daughters-in-law acted as allies in a struggle for financial power against the financial guardian of the household.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Nonetheless, while separated daughters-in-law often narrated their journey from daughter-in-law in a joint household to wife in a nuclear household as a story of emancipation and empowerment, the same daughters-in-law all held an expectation that they themselves would become mothers-in-law with attendant privileges over their own daughters-in-law in due time. At the same time, these daughters-in-law were now under the guardianship of their husbands, who have also been found in prior studies to potentially abuse their economic privileges ( Chowbey, 2017 , Kabeer, 1997 , Singh and Bhandari, 2012 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 74%
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“…Qualitative studies in Nepal, India and Bangladesh have found discriminatory food allocation and low decision-making power prevent high dietary intake during pregnancy (Shannon et al, 2008; Zaidi, 1996; Morrison et al, 2018). Studies of financial power in South Asia have also found significant risks of economic violence and exploitation by other household members for young women who are rarely in a position to openly demand access to cash (Chowbey, 2017; Kabeer, 1997; Singh and Bhandari, 2012; Gram et al, 2018a). In such contexts, simply labelling cash transfers as belonging to beneficiary women may be insufficient to protect their agency over cash transfers – i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%