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Political Economy and the Health and Vulnerability of Battered Women in Northern Vietnam

In: The Economics of Health and Wellness: Anthropological Perspectives

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  • Lynn Kwiatkowski

Abstract

Wife battering has important impacts on the health of battered women, both in the short and long term. This form of gendered violence has been a significant problem in Vietnam. Recent economic, social, and cultural changes occurring in Vietnam, with a transformation toward a socialist-oriented market economy through the state's doi moi political program, have influenced multiple aspects of wife battering. These include perspectives of wife battering, battered women's access to health care, conceptualizations of the household, and the emergence of new international health programs for battered women. Women's health problems derived from wife battering must be understood as processes that are informed by cultural, political, and economic change, on both a societal level and in the lives of individual women experiencing this form of gendered violence.

Suggested Citation

  • Lynn Kwiatkowski, 2007. "Political Economy and the Health and Vulnerability of Battered Women in Northern Vietnam," Research in Economic Anthropology, in: The Economics of Health and Wellness: Anthropological Perspectives, pages 199-226, Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:reanzz:s0190-1281(07)26009-3
    DOI: 10.1016/S0190-1281(07)26009-3
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