Prevalence of intimate partner violence against women in the Arab World: a systematic review

Title: 
Prevalence of intimate partner violence against women in the Arab World: a systematic review
Journal Citation: 
19(29) BMC INTERNATIONAL HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS, 1-16 (2019)

This article reviews intimate partner violence (IPV) in the 22 countries of the Arab League, where many women face existing barriers to social, political, and economic equality. IPV is a gender-based human rights issue that significantly affects women and girls. Through in-depth analyses of sources published between 2000-2016 such as peer-reviewed articles, national population-based survey reports, key-word searches of Medline, the Social Sciences Citation Index, and UN databases, the authors conclude that IPV in the Arab League amounts to a public health and human rights problem. These women and girls sustain substantial levels of physical, sexual, and emotional/psychological trauma as a result of IPV. The authors qualify their research by noting the risk of bias and accounting for it with a structured checklist, as well as by noting that evidence can often be fragmented and thus in need of greater comparable, high-quality research in the field of IPV.