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Domestic Violence in Urban Papua New Guinea, Occasional Paper 19 [1986] PGLawRComm 1 (1 January 1986)

LAW REFORM COMMISSION OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA


DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
IN
URBAN PAPUA NEW GUINEA


edited by
Susan Toft


OCCASIONAL PAPER NO. 19, 1986


Copyright 1985 by the Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea


Printed at the Government Printing Office, Papua New Guinea and published by the Law
Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea.


LAW REFORM COMMISSION OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA


Commissioners


Joseph Faupugu Aisa, Acting Chairman
Roy Tiden
Lepani Watson
Imnaculata Kereku
Robert Lak
Allan Marat


Secretary


Josepha N Kanawi


Research Staff


Sao Gabi
Susan Toff


Administrative Staff


Luke Nalo
Ari Heai
Theresa Imamaeva
Jack Uke-e


The Commission is situated in the 4 Mile Government Offices.


Postal Address: P0 Box 3439
BOROKO
Telephone: 258755


NOTE


This publication is one in a group to be produced by the Papua New Guinea Law
Reform Commission during 1985 and 1986 on the topics of Marriage and/or
Domestic Violence. The others are:


MARRIAGE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN RURAL PAPUA NEW GUINEA
results of a rural survey.


DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA
a collection of articles by professional anthropologists.


MARRIAGE IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA
a companion to Occasional Paper No. 18 ethnographic information from the
survey villages.


DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
summarising and concluding the recent research into domestic violence, with
recommendations.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS


Thanks go to all the people who have contributed to the studies presented in this publication either through participation or administrative support.


The main urban survey, that of low income earners, was only possible because of the co-operation of the University of Papua New Guinea Geography Department, through Stephen Ranck, and the personnel departments of Burns Philip (Papua New Guinea) Ltd., Steamships Ltd., the Electricity Commission and the Defence Force. The survey of elites was done through the support of the Public Services Commission and those senior public servants who responded to the questionnaire.


Rosa Au conducted the urban settlement survey as part of her degree studies and her assistance was very much appreciated. Dr. Alec Ekeroma is thanked for kindly giving us permission to publish the results of his hospital survey. Thanks go to Vagi Raula who drew the graphs, and to Mathew Mobutuna of the National Mapping Bureau for the map. Ari Heai typed the manuscript of this publication, presenting the printer with camera-ready tables and text. She is commended and thanked for her outstanding work and for her patience and perseverance.


LAW REFORM COMMISSION
TERMS OF REFERENCE
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE


I, TONY BAIS, M.P., Minister for Justice, by virtue of the power conferred on me by Section 9 of the Law Reform Commission Act, 1975, and all other powers me enabling, refer the following matter to the Law Reform Commission for enquiry and report –


Because -


1. domestic violence is contrary to the principles of our Constitution; and

2. the law does not enable the police and courts effectively t o protect women from domestic violence.


Enquire into and report to me on -


1. the nature and extent of domestic violence as a social problem; and

2. the legal remedies available for complaints of domestic violence; and

3. any changes to the law which may be necessary or desirable to achieve the protection of women from domestic violence; and

4. the steps which should be taken to bring the problem of domestic violence to the public notice.


In undertaking this reference you will –


1. consult with such bodies or people as you consider appropriate, including the National Council of Women; and

2. consider whether 'domestic assault' should be a specific offence in criminal law so that the police are obliged to prosecute even when the victim will not proceed with charges; and

3. examine the law of evidence and the defence of provocation with particular reference to domestic assault; and

4. consider any other relevant aspect of the topic as may be revealed during the enquiry.


When making your reports on the matters the subject of this reference you will attach drafts of any legislation required to give effect to any of the recommendations in those reports.


Dated this 18th day of August, 1982.


ANTHONY BAIS, M.P..
Minister for Justice.


---------------------------------------


TABLE OF CONTENTS


INTRODUCTION


On 18 August 1982 the Papua New Guinea Minister for Justice, the Honourable A.L. Bais, MP, passed to the Law Reform Commission a Reference on Domestic Violence. The Reference was in response to a request from the National Council of Women (Appendix I). A resolution passed at their Fifth Convention 1981 stated that crimes against women, particularly domestic violence and rape, seemed to be increasing and that there were inadequate controls to protect women.


In formulating an approach towards this as a research topic it was decided that the nature and extent of domestic violence should be investigated through a series of studies. The initial study was rural. A survey was carried out at the end of 1982 and results are published in Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea Occasional Paper No. 18 and Monograph No. 4. This present paper deals with domestic violence in the modern urban environment of Papua New Guinea and includes five approaches to the topic: a survey of urban elites; a survey of urban low income earners; a survey of two urban settlements; a hospital survey; and two case studies of battered urban women.


The urban elite and urban low income earner surveys are analysed together, with comparative data from the previous rural survey, but otherwise the studies are presented independently. They all point to the fact that domestic violence is a phenomenon of married life for many Papua New Guinean couples. The conclusions to each chapter explain the general situation. The findings will be collated in Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea Report No. 14 which will serve as a synopsis for the research on domestic violence conducted by the Commission.


The articles in this present publication are innovative efforts to produce base-line data on domestic violence in Papua New Guinea and they reveal a high rate and tolerance of domestic violence. This could be a partial explanation for the present highly publicised problems of sexual harassment and rape of women.


If violence is occurring between the sexes within the family, then beyond the family even less respect to women may be shown. The rape of women from an enemy group or in a 'pay-back' conflict between men was traditional in many areas. Today, the violent mistreatment of women, much of it apparently exercised on strangers who are random victims, has brought strong public reaction and criticism. This concern prompted the following studies. Both the concern and the studies point to changes in Papua New Guinean attitudes towards marital violence. The country's decision makers need to be aware of these changed attitudes when they plan future development initiatives.


Only 12%1 of Papua New Guinea's total population is urban, but it is urban dwellers who first publicly expressed concern about the occurrence of domestic violence, mainly wife-beating. The urban population is drawn from a rural pool of nearly three million people divided among over seven hundred linguistically discrete ethnic groups. Thus people with diverse cultural backgrounds come together in an urban environment which has developed almost entirely since the Second World War. People are drawn from rural to urban areas by many factors, important among which are employment opportunities, the availability of services such as health and education, the sophistication of the urban life-style and the presence of wantoks2 to provide hospitality and support. Nearly all urban dwellers retain personal rights to the use of land in a rural location, but once having adapted to the town environment few people, especially the more educated ones, find village life congenial for more than brief visits. Coupled with that, in many rural areas, someone who returns permanently to the village is seen as a drop-out, a failure, and there is consequently great social pressure on the urbanite to struggle remorselessly on, not only to survive in the town, but to make a success of it there. Port Moresby, with a population, of over 124,000 is approximately twice the size of the next largest city, Lae. Its role as national capital contributes to making it both the major administrative and commercial centre and it is thus attractive to the aspiring rural person.


Notes


1. Estimates of population are based on the National Statistical Office (January 1982) Papua New Guinea 1980 National Census Pre-Release: Summary of Final Figures. Government Printer, Port Moresby.


2. Wantok is a pidgin word meaning ‘one language’, it is used to express the close relationship between people who share the same language and are therefore from the same cultural group. Sometimes used generally to mean ‘friend’.


CHAPTER ONE
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN AN URBAN CONTEXT
WITH RURAL COMPARISONS

by Stephen Ranck and Susan Toft


INTRODUCTION


The aim of this chapter is to measure the incidence, frequency and intensity of domestic violence amongst urban low income workers and urban elites. The primary data come from questionnaire surveys. The first survey covered low income earners in Port Moresby. It was carried out in 1984. The second survey, of urban elites, was done in 1985. The results of these two urban surveys are compared and contrasted with a similar survey, carried out in 1982 (Toft & Bonnell, 1985), covering rural sections of Papua New Guinea society.


The questionnaire survey technique was used for its speed and wide coverage. The internal consistency within samples, and the patterns revealed among the different samples, point to the basic validity of the technique in this context. In other words, it was the most appropriate data gathering tool given the aims, resources and time for this project. Questionnaires of this sort cannot probe too deeply and will not reveal all the underlying mechanisms triggering domestic violence. What they do very well is to set the minimum parameters for violence and bring the issues clearly into focus for any ameliorative initiatives which may follow or for any future in-depth research. Any bias will generally be in the direction of under-reporting. Therefore, the trends shown in this survey must be taken very seriously as they show the situation in its best light.


Urban low income earner survey


A survey of the low income segment of the urban population was organised in conjunction with the Geography Department at the University of Papua New Guinea. Thirty-six students enrolled in a course 'Cultural Geography' were trained in survey methods and techniques over a period of four weeks. They were then taken out to specific urban locations in Port Moresby with questionnaire papers which they used for formal interviews. Supervision of the students was tightly controlled. The work was an integral part of their course for which they received credits towards a Bachelor of Arts degree: this provided an incentive for the students to procure materials of good quality and ensured a high standard of performance.


As marriage and domestic violence are topics which concern people's personal lives, they could be sensitive to frank discussion in a survey. During the previous urban settlement and rural surveys, however, it was found that respondents were open, co-operative and interested. They appreciated that the family is at the core of their social life and were very willing to contribute to an enquiry seeking to identify problems which threaten marital and family stability. It was felt that a similar approach would work in the urban low income earner survey, but interviewers were cautioned to be sensitive and respect respondents' rights to privacy. Fortunately, respondents were generally co-operative, as observed and as opined by the student researchers in post survey de-briefing. Consistency between male and female results corroborates the quality of the data.


During the rural survey (Toft and Bonnell, 1985) students lived for a month in villages where they developed a working relationship within a homogenous community. This was not possible in the urban situation for various practical reasons including finance, accommodation and other demands on student time. It was felt that in face to face interviews with strangers, people would be most likely to be honest if interviewed in private, and certainly not in the presence of their spouse. As the majority of formal sector low income earners (mainly manual workers) in Port Moresby are men, it was decided to interview the men at their places of work and, also during normal working hours, to visit housing areas identified as low-cost (National Statistical Office 1982) where women could be expected to be at home attending to domestic responsibilities. In principle, female students were to interview women and male students to interview men. This was difficult in practice because, of the 36 students involved in the survey only nine were women, and their task of going around on a door to door survey was time consuming. Consequently, three male students who were mature and capable were selected to interview women employed in low income jobs at their places of work; they, with two women (one of the authors and a senior member of Steamships Personnel Department) interviewed 35.9% of the female respondents in this way.


The target population of low income earners had to be carefully identified. Small business enterprises which had been approached for assistance were unwilling to release employees individually for up to 30 minutes per interview. Two large companies, however, gave the study full support: Burns Philip (Papua New Guinea) Limited and Steamships Trading Company Limited. Without the help of their personnel departments and the managers of various subsidiary businesses the task would have been daunting and very difficult to monitor and control. As it was, easy access was provided to employees in bottling plants, a Laundry, steel works, supermarkets, hotels, a quarry, dock yards, a timber yard, garages, and wholesale storage yards. The total labouring work-force in each place was interviewed. In addition to Burns Philip and Steamships, assistance was given by the Electricity Commission, which made employees available for interview and gave authorization for a door to door survey of the Commission's housing complex, and the Defence Force gave permission for a door to door survey of houses occupied by families of lower ranks at Murray Barracks. Low cost housing areas in the suburb of Gerehu were visited door to door and all houses were covered in each housing area (Gerehu, the Electricity Commission and Murray Barracks)1. Students were taken by bus to pre-arranged places, handed questionnaire papers which were collected when the bus returned to pick up the students, and supervisors did spot-checks during the sessions. Each student was expected to complete a minimum of twenty questionnaires, an average of five during each of four field sessions. Some students needed five sessions to complete their quota and some took an extra session to complete extra questionnaires. A total of 666 people were interviewed of whom 368 (55.3%) were men and 298 (44.7%) were women (Table 1). This is out of an estimated Papua New Guinean urban population in Port Moresby of 131,525, in September 19842. Presently, there are no data to indicate with any precision what proportion of the Port Moresby population would be within the formal low income sector. The respondents represent a wide diversity of residential areas (Table 2).


The previous rural survey served as a preparatory study both for this urban survey of formal sector low income earners and for the separate survey of urban elites. Appropriate questions in the rural questionnaire which related to marriage problems and domestic violence were extracted and used to compose urban questionnaires (Appendices 2 to 4), and on the basis of the rural results, coded answers were formulated. Thus, direct comparisons can be made between the results of the three surveys: rural, urban low income and urban elite. These are presented in this paper.


Urban elite survey


Accessibility to elite respondents was much more difficult than to the lower income groups and elite sensitivities were more pronounced. Responses in the urban elite section may consequently carry a wider margin of error than in either of the other two surveys. However, there is a consistency in the pattern of results which is obvious and which suggests reliability. Further, any bias should be that of under-reporting which means that the urban elite survey shows minimum figures for domestic violence rather than any exaggerations. This principle enhances the value of the survey.


The Public Services Commission of Papua New Guinea lent its support to this survey and directed that all ‘married’ (see definitions below) public servants of high rank, Clerk Class 10 and above, should receive a postal questionnaire.


TABLE 1: CHARACTERISTICS OF SAMPLES ACCORDING TO SEX,
ACE AND MARITAL STATUS AT TIME OF SURVEY



Males
Females
Marital status
Under 30
31-45
Over 45
Sub-total
Under 30
31-45
Over 45
Sub-total
Total
Urban Low Income
Married
172
126
18
316
185
86
3
274
590
Living together*
19
23
2
44
7
2
2
11
55
Divorced
4
3
0
7
5
3
0
8
15
Widowed
0
1
0
1
1
3
1
5
6
Total
195
153
20
368
198
94
6
298
666











Males
Females
Marital status
Under 30
31-45
Over 45
Sub-total
Under 30
31-45
Over 45
Sub-total
Total
Urban elite
Married
25
94
9
128
41
2
0
43
171
Living together*
37
7
1
45
49
3
1
53
98
Divorced
3
1
0
4
3
0
0
3
7
Widowed
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
Total
65
103
10
178
93
5
1
99
277











*The term ‘living together’, as opposed to ‘married’, was recorded as accurately as possible during the low income survey by interview, but it was clear from responses to the postal elite survey that some respondents had not differentiated between the terms ‘married’ and ‘living together’. In cases where both categories were marked, to indicate that the respondent was married living with a spouse, the ‘married’ category only was coded. But there may be respondents who marked ‘living together’ when they were in fact married.


Departments supplied lists of staff who fell into that category and officers were sent separate questionnaires for themselves and their spouse (see Appendices 5 and 6). This was organised in such a way that each person had an addressed envelope in which to seal and return the anonymous questionnaire through the Public Service internal mail system. Of 530 officers circulated (ie. 1060 questionnaires distributed), 277 papers were returned: 178 out of 530 from men, which is a 33.6% response rate, and 99 out of 530 from women, a response rate of 18.7%. Only a handful of senior public servants are women (the official figure was 27 at the time of survey) and most of the women who received questionnaires did so through their husbands (Table 1). It is not possible to know how many of the 178 male respondents in fact took home the questionnaires to their spouses, but it is clear from papers returned that many of the women were of a lower educational
standard than the husbands and had difficulty in completing the form; several questionnaires in excess of 99 were received but had to be discounted because respondents had clearly not understood all the questions, or had spoiled their paper in some way.


TABLE 2 : RESIDENTIAL AREAS OF LOW INCOME EARNER RESPONDENTS


Neighbourhood
No. of MALES
No. of FEMALES
TOTAL
%
Badili
35
4
39
5.9
Bomana
1
1
2
0.3
Boroko
18
13
31
4.7
Neighbourhood (cont.)
No. of MALES
No. of FEMALES
TOTAL
%
Erima
10
0
10
1.5
Gaire
2
0
2
0.3
Gerehu
65
136
201
30.1
Gordons
22
9
31
4.7
Gorobe settlement
1
0
1
0.2
Hanuabada
10
7
17
2.6
Hohola
28
27
55
8.3
Idubada
0
1
1
0.2
June Valley
8
1
9
1.4
Kaugere
6
0
6
0.9
Kila Kila
14
6
20
3.0
Koki
12
1
13
2.0
Konedobu
7
2
9
1.4
Korobosea
14
5
19
2.9
Laloki
15
1
16
2.4
Moitaka
2
2
4
0.6
Morata
17
1
18
2.7
Murray Barracks
8
55
63
9.5
Pari
2
0
2
0.3
Ragamuka
6
2
8
1.8
Sabama
9
2
11
1.7
Saraga
9
2
11
1.7
Tanubada
1
0
1
0.2
Tatana
4
0
4
0.6
Tokarara
17
8
25
3.8
Town
5
3
8
1.2
Tubusereia
4
1
5
0.8
Vabukori
5
5
10
1.5
Waigani
10
3
13
2.0
Total
368
298
666
100

Definitions and background


For the purpose of this study, marriage is defined as ‘....a union between a man and woman such that children born by the woman are recognised as the legitimate offspring of both partners’ (Committee of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, 1974:71).


There are three forms of marriage recognised and practised in Papua New Guinea today: marriage according to custom, marriage according to church law and marriage according to state law which is often referred to as general law marriage (Marriage Act, Chapter No. 280, Revised Laws of Papua New Guinea 1980). The three types of marriage are not exclusive. For instance church marriages often include the registration of marriage according to the Marriage Act. In urban areas a fourth form, the de facto marriage, is an increasing phenomenon, largely for the convenience of the couple involved. This type of liaison is discussed in more detail in Chapter 4. For the purpose of the urban surveys de facto relationships are not distinguished from other forms of marriage because many urban Papua New Guineans today do not readily recognise the distinction.


The marriage union is arranged, solemnised and maintained according to varying practices throughout society, and involves partners in a number of reciprocal rights and duties. These rights and responsibilities are vested in the social roles held by individuals according to their status within a particular society. Husbands and wives have many roles within the context of marriage, the extended family and society at large. The expectations that members of a society have of individuals in their roles are determined by social values and norms, and the failure of individuals to fulfil these expectations exposes them to criticism. The problem of expectations spouses have of each other and failure on the part of one of them to fulfil obligations became a focal point of interest during the rural survey. It featured importantly in the results of that survey and needs some explanation.


The survey term ‘failure to meet obligations’ covers a wide variety of unfulfilled cultural expectations concerning the behaviour of husbands and wives in marriage. In the sample of villages covered, the prime concern was failure of the wife in traditional obligations, including household duties. The wives themselves agreed that such behaviour gave legitimate grounds for criticism, and although there is clearly the concept of a lazy wife, it was also clear during interview that women may deliberately withhold services as a sign of dissatisfaction with their husbands.


‘Failure to meet obligations’ as stated by both male and female respondents was usually referring to the wife’s rather than the husband’s failings. Examples of traditional services which rural wives are obliged to perform include cultivating the garden, preparing food, looking after pigs and other wealth, looking after and feeding relatives, giving the husband sexual access, contributing to general family welfare and performing ritual functions when necessary. One of the researchers in an ethnographic description of Uma village, Southern Highlands, wrote:


From my own observations, the women do more work than the

men. Wives show a lot of respect to their husbands by performing

their duties properly in order to please their husband.

On the other hand the men show little respect to the wives.

They let the wives do a lot of work but do not let them

participate in decision making. When sharing goods and

possessions, often the husbands do not make a fair distribution

and they keep the money after the sale of goods in the

market. They also hit their wife when she fails to do her

work properly without realising that wives are loaded with

a lot of work. Beside this, the husbands often take a new

wife, causing problems within the families (Warus n.d.)


In the male-dominated societies which are prevalent in rural (neo-traditional) Papua New Guinea women are under greater daily pressure than men to perform duties. Men also have specific obligations but their traditional tasks tend to be less related to the immediate needs of the family and seem to have been more influenced by change than those of women. For instance, a man whose father would have been mainly engaged in territorial defence may himself be occupied primarily in the production of cash crops. His wife, however, still the provider of subsistence crops and the housekeeper, holds roles which are in principle unchanged. Men's obligatory duties are sometimes more arduous than women's but are irregular, and in general men have more options concerning their own activities on a day to day basis.


Women’s failure to meet obligations emerged as a major cause of problems and violence in rural areas. Therefore it was surmised that, in the urban environment where the pattern of life is different and roles are less clearly prescribed, even more serious marital problems would arise because the expectations spouses might have of each other, based on traditional concepts of roles and standards, would be impossible to fulfil.


There is a second term used in the survey which needs clarification: ‘sexual jealousy’. Jealousy seems to be an accepted justifiable emotion and a genuine cause for grievance in Papua New Guinea, whether relating to sexual suspicion or envy of success in others. Traditionally, a jealous person was one who could be expected to attack the object of his or her feelings through magic. So it was in the past, and is still today, considered inadvisable to arouse jealous feelings in a person.


Jealousy relates to sex through the possessiveness which a person may feel for a sexual or marital partner. Both behaviour which arouses jealousy and jealous behaviour are often culturally determined. General ethnographic information on Papua New Guinea tells of numerous and varied traditional ways in which sexual segregation is upheld. To ethnocentric Western eyes, noting outward appearances only, Papua New Guineans may seem to be immodest. To many Westerners, for instance, exposure of a woman's torso by the scantiness of traditional styles of dress has a sexual connotation. In fact, in Papua New Guinea strong and often subtle social constraints distance men from women, prescribing social behaviour and thereby formalising relationships. In some traditional Papua New Guinea societies the level of segregation between sexes could be compared with that found in Muslim countries where the separation is overtly expressed and displayed.


The word adultery is not always used in Papua New Guinea in its literal sense: sexual intercourse between two people when at least one of them is married. Thus, when people give adultery as a questionnaire response the meaning may well not include the physical relationship which it would in the West; rather it indicates offended, suspicious or jealous emotions which have been provoked by the behaviour of a spouse in relating to a member of the opposite sex. Further confusion is due to the fact that the word adultery does not always have a precise equivalent in translation. It is also due to the fact that in some Papua New Guinean societies, to be seen in circumstances which traditionally would be considered compromising can be as serious as if sexual intercourse had occurred. Such circumstances might be talking to someone who custom dictates should be at a social distance or to someone with whom normal sexual relations would not be taboo. For example by Question 5, ‘What do you think causes problems in marriage?’, on the questionnaire of a male respondent in the village of Vavua, West New Britain, the interviewer wrote: “[A problem is caused] if a married man gives betel nut, or other things, to another woman who is not a relative, and the wife finds out and suspects him
of having an affair”.


Jealous feelings may be particularly exacerbated when the social distance which men and women are customarily expected to observe starts to break down, as is occurring in the changing rural and urban spheres of Papua New Guinean society. It is better to talk of sexual suspicion or sexual jealousy rather than adultery as a source of marital problems. The questionnaire category ‘sexual jealousy’ includes adultery, real or suspected, and behaviour on the part of a spouse which is considered loose or tantamount to adultery according to custom.


Sexual jealousy featured as a major problem and cause of violence in the rural survey. Therefore, it was expected that problems due to sexual suspicion and jealousy would increase in the anonymity of the urban situation, where spouses can move around more independently of each other and of relatives or of co-villagers who would know their activities in the rural context.


There is a relationship between a wife’s failure to meet her obligations and some other categories of questionnaire response, especially sexual jealousy, which is difficult to assess. If a wife is displeased with her husband, and is possibly jealous, she may express her resentment by withholding services, by not cooking for example, as a result of which her husband may hit her. The stated problem may be that she failed in her obligations: he hit her because she did not cook. But the original, hidden cause of the problem is that she was jealous, whether justifiably so or not.


SURVEY RESULTS


Below, the findings from the three surveys are presented, compared and contrasted. Short titles have been given to each group surveyed. ‘Rural’ is used to designate the rural survey. ‘Urban Low Income’ is used to designate the low income earners who are married and working in the urban formal sector, and married women whose husbands may or may not be formally employed (93.3% of the female respondents had employed husbands; 18.5% of the male respondents had employed wives). ‘Urban Elite’ designates high ranking government employees who returned their postal surveys (50.3% of them had wives who were employed).


Causes of problems in marriage


The questionnaire respondents were all asked to name what in their opinion were the three greatest sources of marital problems. Figure 1 shows the responses. It illustrates a consistency between male and female responses which is reflected in most of the survey results. Emphasis on problems may differ but rankings of importance generally show consistency between the sexes.


As mentioned in the Introduction, the two main causes of marriage problems in rural areas are sexual jealousy and a wife’s failure to meet marital obligations, and it was supposed that both these problems would be more severe in the urban environment. This is not the case. They are still important problems, but they have rivals in alcohol and money. Access to alcohol is much easier in the urban environment and money is required for food and other essentials.


Seventy-one per cent of the urban low income women (70.8%) place alcohol at the top of their scale. It is understandable, as men are the primary consumers of alcohol, that fewer of them (40%) accept that this is a problem. Elite men (60.7%) and women (65.7%). however agree with one another in placing it at the top of their list. Urban elite men are perhaps more objective in their judgement; it is unlikely that our respondents were mainly non-drinkers because alcohol features elsewhere in elite results.


Sexual jealousy is seen as the second most common cause of problems by both the urban groups of women: 61.1% of the low income group and 52.5% of elite group. Unfortunately, there is nothing to show whether the problems stem more from male or female provocation. The fact that the men in all three surveys saw sexual jealousy as slightly less of a problem than the women did could be connected with the fact that the majority of men feel they have proprietary rights over their wives, in which case male possessiveness is not seen as a problem. It is likely that women generally feel more threatened by the freedom men have, even the traditional freedom to take more wives, and are more vulnerable as victims of both male jealousy and male promiscuity.


Rural


Urban Low Income


Urban Elite



The men from the urban low income group see money problems as the biggest obstacle to marital peace. Slightly more women in that group (57.4%, compared with 56.0% of the men) also think that money causes problems, but it is third on their list after alcohol and sexual jealousy. It is to be expected that, for this group of people, money, or lack of it, would present problems. The urban elites also see money as a problem but both the men and women, like the low income women, place it after alcohol and sexual jealousy. The relationship between money problems and alcohol consumption is obvious, and it is impossible to know whether the fact that alcohol features so strikingly as a major problem is connected more to the effect it has on a household budget or to a husband's drunken behaviour.


The elites presumably have more money at their disposal than other urbanites, but the pressures on them to spend are just as demanding as on other groups. Not least, their urban low income relatives and wantoks3 expect their help. Apart from providing a certain ‘know how’ when required, the provision of money is the basic way in which urbanites can help their rural cousins. The demands are varied - air fares, school fees, medicine, bride-price contributions, pocket-money etc. - but money is the solution. Problems from relatives and wantoks feature much more in the elite survey than in the others and this is likely to be strongly connected with financial demands from a wide circle of people. Troubles over bride-price feature as a minor problem in all three surveys. When respondents stated that this was a problem it was more with reference to pressure being put upon the couple by parents and less to do with lack of cash. The wife's family want to extract bride-price payments in cash or kind from the man or his family and the main way they do this is through the couple. This causes friction between their daughter and her husband or between the couple and either family.


The category ‘failure to meet obligations’ is markedly different in the three sets of survey results. This is particularly important because it indicates a change in attitudes and concepts of roles. In the rural survey men saw a wife's failure to meet obligations as the major cause of problems. Women also felt this was a big problem, but neither sex complained much about a husband failing in his obligations. In the urban low income survey we see indications of women changing their stand and slightly more of them named a husband's failure to meet his obligations as a cause of problems than did those who named a wife's failure: 17.4% as opposed to 15.1%. The elite women complained almost as much about men failing in their obligations (46.5%) as men complained about women (48.9%). The following extract from the data in Figure 1 makes the picture clear (Table 3).


TABLE 3: ATTITUDES TOWARDS MARITAL OBLIGATIONS



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Wife not meeting obligations
63.2
56.4
35.7
15.1
48.9
30.3
Husband not meeting obligations
3.9
3.6
21.7
17.4
34.8
46.5

The urban male is apparently under greater domestic pressure than is the rural male. Urban male roles tend to follow those of the Western world, where the man is openly seen as the principal provider for the family. The rural male has had many of his traditional functions as protector and hunter for the family severely eroded, leaving him under much less pressure to perform on a day to day basis regarding subsistence and survival. Table 3 shows clearly that some urban men accept that husbands not meeting obligations cause problems in marriage. Amongst the urban low income group, both men and women feel that husbands are not meeting obligations, which points to an increasing sensitivity amongst men about the changing urban male domestic role. This is most evident amongst the urban elite, where the highest response rates regarding husbands failing to meet obligations are shown, but in this instance it is the women who are relatively most concerned. The two groups, men and women, are behaving identically. They both see there are problems regarding the fulfilment of obligations but tend to point an accusing finger at the other group. Many men and women now acknowledge that in the urban environment men have 'domestic' obligations towards their wives which they should fulfil. So two changes have occurred: the role of the male within the family and the attitudes of both sexes towards male and female roles.


Urban women are less prepared than rural women to admit fault in failing to meet obligations. This is a new attitude which indicates that many of them no longer accept that they are servant to man. They have reassessed their role and rejected their previous subordinate position. The urban elite women do not show this new attitude the same way as the women in the low income group, but it is evident from Table 3 that the attitudes of male and female urban elites follow a similar trend. Many of them recognise they are not meeting obligations and each sex sees the other as failing even more in this respect than itself. This is indicative of the strain which urban elite marriage partners must be under. They realise the new requirements entailed by modern marriage and approximately 30% of husbands and wives noted themselves failing in obligations, whereas around 47% felt their spouses were more at fault. It is understandable that people should more readily find fault in a partner than in themselves when under pressure in an entirely new socio-economic and material environment.


In the ethnically heterogeneous urban environment, unlike rural areas, mixed marriages (marriages between Papua New Guineans from different ethnic groups) are not unusual. Expectations people have in the roles of husband and wife are based largely on their own socialisation and experience, so if two people from different backgrounds with different role expectations marry, there may be conflict over the performance of one or both of the partners in their role as spouse. Another source of conflict in these marriages can be the two sets of relatives with their two differing sets of expectations. Mixed marriages are seen in Figure 1 as a minor new cause of problems. It must also be noted that mixed marriages can have benefits which the data do not touch upon. For example, mixed marriages sometimes provide a means of escape from village obligations and arranged marriages.


TABLE 4: ARE RESPONDENTS AND SPOUSES FROM THE SAME
LANGUAGE CROUP?



URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
69.8
60.7
50.3
56.6
No
30.2
39.3
49.7
43.4

The extent to which mixed marriages exist in urban areas can be gauged by responses to a question asking if a respondent and his or her spouse are from the same language group. Table 4 shows that approximately two-thirds of the low income group are from the same cultural group and one third have mixed marriages. For the elites, it is closer to half of the group which has mixed marriages, and the higher number of elite people who named mixed marriages as causing marriage problems is consistent with this higher proportion of mixed marriages. The difference between elite male and female results reflects the degree to which returned questionnaires were not in fact from couples; this is because sometimes only one of a couple, either male or female, responded and also because of the much higher number of male respondents.


On the positive side for mixed marriages, there is a reduction in marital problems due to simple dislike of the marriage partner. In the rural areas, where people are often pressured by families into making particular marriages, dislike of partner was thought to be a problem by over one third of the respondents (35.1% men, 33.9% women). In both the low income and elite surveys this category is reduced to less than 10% of the respondents. There could be several factors contributing to this urban situation, such as the fact that people are more free to choose their own marriage partners, the need for couples to co-operate more closely in organising their lives coupled with the independence of the nuclear family in the urban context and better opportunities to leave disliked partners.


Children, in as much as they cause problems in marriage, did not feature in any specific way in questionnaire responses. Presumably there must be some problems between spouses in raising children but these were not deemed serious enough to mention.


Lack of accommodation features only in the low income earner survey and as a minor problem. Housing in Port Moresby i s expensive and in short supply. Doubtless over-crowding occurs and the extended family system is used to off-set the shortage. Respondents may well accept the bad housing and may, therefore, not have complained as much as their living conditions might warrant. Further, the low income sample was taken from individuals generally better housed than many others because their employers often provided housing for male employees and their families. This bias may mask housing as a source of marital problems amongst the informal sector and other income earners.


The main focus of the questionnaire was domestic violence and this will be discussed in detail later in this paper. But the category ‘husband hitting wife’ as a cause of problems in marriage is interestingly low. Domestic violence is not seen as a major problem although women expressed more concern about it than men. The situation is that, in general, domestic violence does not threaten the stability of a marriage. It is accepted as a part of married life and not seen as a problem unless it becomes too severe and too frequent.


A final glance at Figure 1 shows that there seem to be more categories of problems which the urban dweller identifies. Life appears more complex in the urban environment and it may be that as new sources of problems arise the old problems assume less significance, rather than disappear.


The people to whom marriage problems are taken


Having identified causes of marital problems respondents were asked if they ever discuss their own problems with anyone. Table 5 shows that the majority of people do discuss


TABLE 5: IF PEOPLE HAVE MARRIAGE PROBLEMS, DO THEY
DISCUSS THEM WITH ANYONE?



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
60.3
58.4
51.4
52.7
59.1
60.6
No
39.7
41.6
48.6
47.0
40.9
39.4

their problems and Figure 2 identifies the kind of people to whom the respondents go for discussion. The urban dwellers have more options than the villagers regarding the categories of people available, but relatives are the ones to whom people turn most, except for the urban elite women. The role of friends becomes more important in the town and particularly the elite women depend on friends in this way. The elites also try to sort out the problems themselves more than the other two groups, though the low income town people also do this to some extent. After relatives and friends, the church plays a significant role, and it is clear that formal services provided by welfare agencies, the ‘Lifeline’ independent counselling service, the police and the courts are not well used, except perhaps in the case of the rural village court. This latter is anyway in effect operated by relatives, friends and wantoks of the parties concerned. Marriage problems are basically seen as private affairs, and not the concern of the state.


Figure 2 : The people to whom marriage problems are taken


Rural


Urban low income


Urban elite



People most likely to help a beaten wife


Figure 3 looks at a different group of people, those most likely to come to the aid of a beaten wife. The answers are in many ways predictable. Again, relatives are the people
most involved in help, in all three survey groups, with a variety of other categories of helpers emerging in the urban context. The extent to which friends are thought to be involved in the urban setting shows a new trend. It is commonly held that people will not interfere in what is seen to be a private matter between a husband and wife, but it seems as if friends and neighbours may in fact be assuming the role that relatives held in the rural situation. The responses to this survey question were based on supposition and opinion, not facts.


Figure 3: People most likely to help a beaten wife


Rural



Urban low income



Urban elite


Measuring domestic violence


A way of trying to gain an impression of the extent to which domestic violence exists was through a coded question asking in the rural questionnaire. ‘How many husbands hit their wives in this village?’ and in the low income and elite questionnaires, ‘How many husbands hit their wives in your neighbourhood or among your friends?’. Table 6 shows the responses.


TABLE 6: HOW MANY HUSBANDS HIT THEIR WIVES?



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
None
1.2
0.6
13.1
14.8
7.9
9.1
Some
54.3
58.6
51.8
61.3
77.0
70.7
Many
37.0
33.7
31.3
22.6
14.5
19.2
All
7.5
7.1
3.8
1.3
0.6
1.0

The highest response rate for no husbands hitting their wives (the category ‘none’) is amongst the urban low income, which is consistent with this group showing the least violence. Amongst the rural group nearly everyone knew of violence, which is hardly unusual given the open communal nature of village life.


Gauging the extent of violence becomes more difficult in distinguishing between the knowledge of ‘some’ and ‘many’ husbands hitting their wives amongst friends and neighbours. If the two categories are combined, the pattern for ‘none’ as reference repeats itself, pointing to less violence amongst the urban low income group. As separate entities, the 'some' and 'many' categories show a slightly different pattern which may reflect fact or a reticence on the part of the elite to nominate many friends as demonstrably violent. Or, the elite home setting, often among strangers in a high-cost housing area, may isolate people to some extent from knowledge of their friends' activities and thus account for the pattern of elite responses.


The category ‘all’ is highest amongst the rural sector and lowest amongst the elite with the urban low income between. This final category must make up a special sub-set of particularly violent friends and neighbours.


A subsequent question given only in the urban and elite surveys asked, ‘Does a next door neighbour at home hit his wife?’ Table 7 shows a noteworthy consistency in replies to this factual question (although the concept of which neighbours are actually ‘next door’ is possibly ambiguous).


TABLE 7: THE NUMBER OF NEXT DOOR NEIGHBOURS WHO HIT WIVES



URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
66.6
67.1
66.5
62.6
No
33.4
32.9
33.5
37.4

Approximately two-thirds of the respondents said they live next door to a man who hits his wife. It now seems appropriate to look at the number of respondents who admit to having hit their spouse (Table 8) and those who claim to have been hit (Table 9).


TABLE 8: THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE HIT THEIR SPOUSE



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
66.0
33.4
55.5
24.3
62.5
49.0
No
34.0
66.6
44.5
75.7
37.5
51.0

The figures are very consistent in that Table 8 shows 66% of the rural men say they have hit and in Table 9, 67% of the women say they have been hit. Similarly, 55.5% of the male urban low income earners say they have hit, and 56.1% of the women say they have been hit; and 62.5% of the elite men say they have hit whilst 62.2% of the women have been hit. Readers are reminded that, except to some extent in the elite survey, respondents were not married couples.


TABLE 9: THE NUMBER OF SPOUSES WHO HAVE BEEN HIT



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
29.9
67.0
37.3
56.1
50.0
62.2
No
70.1
33.0
62.7
43.9
50.0
37.8

There is less consistency in the matter of wives hitting husbands: 33.4% of the rural women claim to have hit and 29.9% of the men admit to having been hit; 24.3% of the urban low income women say they have hit, but 37.3% of the men claim to have been hit; 49% of the elite women have hit and 50% of the men have been hit.


The figures point to the likelihood that well over half the married male population on a national level hit their wives and roughly half that number of women hit their husbands. We are careful not to say that women retaliate, because there were some female respondents who admitted to having hit husbands who had never hit them (4.5% of the low income urban males said they have been hit but have not themselves hit). The women are inconsistent, however, and it looks as if elite women are asserting themselves unlike the others. This is relevant to the next aspect of this paper which is an examination of attitudes towards domestic violence.


Attitudes compared with practices


Respondents were asked if, in their opinion, it i s acceptable for a man to hit his wife. The answers are recorded in Table 10. Urbanisation and education/income show a negative correlation to thinking that hitting is alright. The majority of urban low income men and even more urban elite men do not think that hitting a wife is acceptable, whereas the majority of rural men sampled do think it is alright. New attitudes are arising in the new environment.


TABLE 10: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A MAN TO HIT HIS WIFE?



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
67.5
57.0
42.3
25.3
41.2
36.4
No
32.5
43.0
57.7
74.7
58.8
63.6

Although men's attitudes are mellowing this is not altogether matched by their behaviour: 21.3% of the elite men (but only 8.8% of the low income men) who admit they have hit, had previously stated that hitting is unacceptable behaviour. Women's attitudes are changing and there is a difference between the rural and urban environments in the gap between those married women who are hit and those married women who accept a husband's right to hit (regardless of their own particular case).


TABLE 11: COMPARISON OF ATTITUDES AND PRACTICES:
HUSBANDS HITTING WIVES



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Attitude – is it alright to hit?
65.4
46.7
41.2
55.1
25.3
36.4
Practice – have you hit?
66.0
55.5
62.5
*
*
*
- have you been hit?
*
*
*
67.0
56.1
62.2

*Compare with Table 12.


TABLE 12: COMPARISON OF ATTITUDES AND PRACTICES:
WIVES HITTING HUSBANDS



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Attitude – is it alright to hit?
50.5
44.1
38.8
45.1
33.2
37.4
Practice – have you hit?
*
*
*
33.4
24.3
49.0
- have you been hit?
29.9
37.3
50.0
*
*
*

Compare with Table 11.


In the rural survey there was a 11.9% gap (67% who have been hit minus 55.1% who accept a husband's right to hit) between these two categories of married women, but in the low income survey the gap increased to 30.8% (56.1% minus 25.3%) and in the elite survey it was 25.8% (62.2% minus 36.4%). It is not surprising that in the context of wife-beating women's attitudes are changing faster than those of men. Women (except the very few who suffer from psychosis) do not like being beaten even if they accept a man's right to hit them. It is possible that a new sense of identity already expressed by urban women in their attitude towards male and female obligations in a marriage (see page 15) is causing them to object strongly to beatings. This in itself may influence the men enough to reduce the incidence of violence, although some men's attitudes will also be influenced in this respect by external factors such as education.


With regard to the acceptability of wives hitting husbands (Table 13), attitudes are again inclined to move away from supporting hitting, between the rural neo-traditional environment and the urban environment; but a comparison of attitudes and practices is again informative (Table 12). According to the men, the incidence of violence against them is actually increasing, regardless of attitudes. Is it more likely that the urban men are exaggerating wifely violence or that urban women are not always admitting that they hit? Probably the latter, or there may be some sample bias as couples were not interviewed, except partially among the urban elite, which shows the closest correlation.


TABLE 13: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A WIFE TO HIT HER HUSBAND?



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
53.3
45.1
44.1
33.2
38.8
37.4
No
46.7
54.9
55.9
66.8
61.2
62.6

An outstanding feature of the figures is that although only 25.3% of the low income women think it is alright for a husband to hit his wife (Table 11), 33.2% of them think it is alright for a wife to hit her husband (Table 12). The justification is, of course, self-defence. This attitude provides a further example of the move women are making away from their subordination to men.


Reasons for domestic violence


Figures 4 and 5 show attitudes regarding what, in the opinions of respondents, justifies a man or woman hitting his or her spouse. In all three surveys, with the exception of the low income urban women, men and women agree that a wife's failure to fulfil her obligations is the main justification for her husband to hit her. However, the difference between the surveys in the percentage of respondents who say this is important (Table 14).


TABLE 14: JUSTIFICATION FOR WIFE-BEATING



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Wife fails to meet her obligations
60.7
55.6
37.8
19.2
29.8
29.3

Adaptations to the urban environment are taking place. In addition to being less in favour of violence, the urban dweller has to some extent accepted that a woman's role is different in the urban environment. There is a small group of town people who feel that a wife's job, in cases where she has one outside the home, can interfere with her domestic obligations, and this is seen as a reason to hit. There is a small group of men and women who are prepared to state quite bluntly that a husband has a right to hit his wife. In Figures 4 to 7 the rural category ‘domestic argument’ is hard to assess, but the implication is that if a woman argues with her husband he has the right to hit her. He is expected to assert his control in an argument, whatever the cause. The altercation may have stemmed from her failure to please him in some way, or may have had a number of other causes, but physical dominance resolves the issue.


Sexual jealousy features in all three surveys as a provocation to violence. It is rated below failure to meet obligations but is seen by the surveyed groups as the second main justification for a man to hit his wife. There are two exceptions: one, prominence given by the rural respondents to the category ‘domestic argument’ which, as just mentioned above, clouds the issue and which probably includes arguments triggered by sexual jealousy; the second is the elite urban men who rank self-defence above sexual jealousy as a justification for hitting their wife, probably because, as has already been established, they are under attack more than the two other groups of men.


Figure 4: Opinion on what justifies a husband hitting his wife


Rural



Urban low income



Urban elite


*The category ‘domestic argument’ was used in the rural survey but was replaced by ‘money problems’ in the two urban surveys.


Figure 5 :Opinion on what justifies a wife hitting her husband


Rural



Urban low income


Urban elite



*The category ‘domestic argument’ was used in the rural survey but was replaced by ‘money problems’ in the two urban surveys.


In addition to being seen as major causes of marital problems, money problems and alcohol were also seen as causes of violence. It is noteworthy, however, that a small group of town people, both low income and elite, accept that when a husband is drunk he cannot be held responsible for his behaviour - it is acceptable, or excusable, if he hits when drunk.


From Figure 5, it seems that opinion on what justifies a wife hitting her husband is in many ways similar to when husbands hit wives. A husband’s failure to meet obligations is there but to a lesser degree. Self-defence is the most obvious difference between the two graphs. They indicate that there is some acknowledgement that women have a right to defend themselves. A new element in the urban responses is that women in towns sometimes become drunk – an unusual occurrence in Papua New Guinea. Apart from a small number of elite men, few people said that a wife has an automatic right to hit her husband: there must be a valid reason.


Figure 6 looks at reasons given by respondents for why they have hit. In all three surveys the majority of responses from women name self-defence. The majority of responses from men cite a wife’s failure to meet obligations. Figure 7, which gives an alternative perspective, the victims’ reasons for why he or she was hit, confirms this. Readers are again reminded that, except partially in the elite survey, respondents were not couples. The low income urban men report that they were hit for failing to fulfil obligations more than the women said that this was the reason for hitting. Once more the general category of ‘domestic argument’ can confuse the issue. The most common reason low income urban women gave for being hit was that the husband was drunk. The men however, did not perceive things this way. A similar situation exists amongst the urban elite women who name alcohol as a major problem (though not the greatest one) whereas the elite urban males make no mention of alcohol as a problem.


In other words, it appears that when a husband is drunk he finds fault with his wife (often, either for not fulfilling obligations or for making him jealous) and hits her. She identifies the alcohol as triggering the attack, whereas he blames her behaviour.


Figure 6 : Reasons why respondents hit spouse


Rural



Urban low income



Urban elite



Figure 7 : Reasons why respondents have been hit by spouse


Rural



Urban low income



Urban elite



*The category ‘domestic argument’ was used in the rural and urban low income surveys but was replaced by ‘money problems’ in the elite urban survey.


Some incidents are completely alcohol related: the man is drunk, the wife reacts with non-submissive behaviour, perhaps refusing to prepare him food (i.e. she fails to fulfil an obligation) in the middle of the night or perhaps nagging him for his drunkenness and the money spent on drink, and a fight erupts. This is very different from the rural areas where hitting was generally not associated with alcohol. There appears everywhere to be, however, a scenario of the wife who is hit because she does not somehow come up to the husband's expectations and a proportion of beaten wives who strike out in self-defence.


The frequency of marital violence


Respondents were asked how often violent fights erupt and Figures 8 and 9 show the responses. The main pattern which the figures display is that the majority of couples have violent fights once a year or more, although not as often as every month. The women say with consistency, both as attackers and victims, that there is more violence than the men say there is. The difference is particularly pronounced among the urban elites and this is notable because responses from men and women in this group to other questions have shown general agreement. The men say clearly that violent fights are less frequent than the women perceive them to be. Maybe this is because many of these men, perhaps disapproving of domestic violence in theory, are tending to minimise the problem (21% of them who said it is not acceptable for a man to hit his wife still said they themselves hit).


Another noticeable feature in the data is the higher frequency of violence in the urban low income group among the small number of people who hit often: every month, every fortnight or every week. Although overall there are fewer people who hit in the lower income survey group than in the rural or urban elite groups, it seems that when violence does exist there are more cases in this group where it is a constant problem. That Figures 8 and 9 indicate violent fights occur with less frequency in rural rather than urban areas is not considered significant: rural life has a timelessness which makes it difficult for respondents to be accurate in such estimates.


Objects used in domestic violence and serious injuries sustained


In the rural survey several questions were asked about the use of weapons in fights between spouses (Occasional Paper No. 18 which contains the rural survey results shows that the main justification for rural men to use a weapon against wives is sexual jealousy and the main justification for rural women to hit husbands with a weapon is self-defence).


Figure 8 : The frequency with which people have
hit their spouse


Rural


Urban low income


Urban elite


Figure 9: The frequency with which people
have been hit by their spouse
Rural


Urban low income


Urban elite


In order to keep the urban questionnaire as brief as possible, these were reduced to two questions asking factually which weapons had been used. It was an attempt to see i f town women, like rural women, use weapons more than men, and also to try to assess the extent to which weapons are used.


Figures 10 and 11 tally reasonably well in comparing what the beaters and the beaten have said. It is necessary to look at the precise figures, which appear in Tables 15 and 16, to see the full picture. These tables may be interpreted in one of two ways. Either the victims of violence are over-estimating the use of weapons or the perpetrators of attacks are underestimating the use of weapons. It seems much more likely that the attackers, or hitters, of Table 15 are under-estimating their use of weapons. Note that this behaviour is common to both sexes.


In the case of hitting with hands, the picture changes somewhat. The correspondence is almost perfect between the males of Table l5 who say they have hit with their hand and the females of Table 16 who say they have been hit by a hand. However, reversing all other trends of weapons, more females from all three samples state in Table 15 that they have hit their spouse with the hand than all males in Table 16 say they have been hit. One explanation for this may be that the males consider the incidents too trivial or unmanly to mention. Simply forgetting the incident is also possible and points to an unconcerned attitude.


Weapons used vary between the urban and rural environments. Sticks are much more common items in rural areas and they are used more, whereas stones and belts are obviously handier to urbanites. Knives must be considered the most dangerous weapon of those specifically recorded, with males facing the brunt of knife attacks. Except in the urban elite group, the responses between those attacking with a knife and those being attacked differ by approximately 5%, which again indicates under-estimation on the part of attackers.


Both the rural and urban low income females are attacking with weapons other than hands at about the same rate, if Table 16 is accepted as the true picture. Table l5 shows urban low income females stating a much lower general use of weapons than their male counterparts in Table 16. In Table 16, the urban low income males report more stone and knife attacks against them than the urban elite and rural men.


Figure 10 : Weapons which respondents have used to hit spouses


Rural


Urban low income


Urban elite

Figure 11 : Weapons used to hit respondents


Rural


Urban low income


Urban elite


TABLE 15: WEAPONS USED BY RESPONDENTS
Multiple responses given by people who have hit (See Figure 10)



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Stick
24.9
68.1
15.4
23.6
4.5
27.7
Knife
3.3
10.5
1.0
13.9
-
10.6
Axe
5.0
-
1.0
-
-
-
Thongs
-
-
3.0
-
-
-
Stone
-
4.3
2.0
12.5
-
10.6
Belt
3.3
-
8.5
-
7.1
2.1
Chain
-
-
0.5
-
-
-
Teeth
-
10.0
-
-
-
-
Other
1.9
11.4
3.0
26.4
1.8
14.9
Hand
91.4
68.6
96.0
68.1
10.0
74.5
Sample size
421
210
201
72
112
47

TABLE 16 : WEAPONS USED TO HIT RESPONDENTS
Multiple responses given by people who have been hit (See Figure 11)



RURAL
URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
%M
%F
Stick
72.8
33.7
54.8
13.3
37.5
9.8
Knife
16.2
7.6
18.5
5.4
11.4
4.9
Axe
5.2
0.2
1.5
1.2
-
-
Thongs
-
-
0.7
-
1.1
-
Stone
-
-
23.0
0.6
12.5
1.6
Belt
-
-
2.2
5.4
3.4
4.9
Chain
-
-
-
1.2
-
-
Teeth
-
1.0
-
-
-
-
Other
25.7
14.5
15.6
9.6
13.6
1.6
Hand
59.7
90.5
49.6
94.6
72.7
98.3
Sample size
191
421
135
166
88
61

The minority of urban low income women who attack their husbands may be using weapons slightly less than rural women. Certainly, this is their claim in Table 15, but it is not backed up by males in Table 16. Further, a higher percentage of those women who hit, than those men who hit, use weapons. This same pattern is evident amongst the urban elite, although there is a decline in weapon use amongst the elites of both sexes. Women use weapons more often than men for the number of times they hit. In other words, proportionally more women than men use weapons, and, in proportion to the number of times they hit, women use weapons more frequently than men.


This is consistent with the fact that women are often hitting in self-defence and are usually physically weaker than men. It cannot always be assumed that a fight including weapons causes worse injuries than one involving fists. A severe beating by fists alone is enough to hospitalize an individual. In rare cases, it may even prove fatal. However, as a general rule, the authors assume that fists are less harmful than most weapons, and that any rise in the use of particularly dangerous arms such as knives must be viewed with concern. Thus there must be rising concern for the presently small subset of urban low income women who are frequently involved in violent incidents and who are becoming more prone to using dangerous weapons, generally in retaliation for attacks on themselves.


In order to have some idea about the degrees of violence - how serious injuries might be - respondents in the urban environment who said they had been hit were asked if they had ever had to go to the hospital for treatment after being involved in a violent marital dispute. Table 17 displays a consistency between replies from both the low income and elite groups: 29% of the women and 12% of the men in both groups who have been hit have receive a hospital treatment at least once.


TABLE 17: PEOPLE WHO HAVE RECEIVED HOSPITAL TREATMENT
AFTER A MARITAL DISPUTE



URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
12.3
28.9
12.6
29.0
No
87.7
71.1
87.4
71.0
Sample size
135
166
88
61

Reporting domestic disputes to the police


The same respondents were asked if they had ever reported a marital dispute to the police. This would not necessarily reflect degrees of injuries but could do so: there is a general tendency to regard domestic disputes as private and if the police are called in it implies a serious escalation of the dispute with possible ramifications of a broken marriage and disputes over child custody. The calling in of police removes the action from the private domain of the family to the public domain of the state. Table 18 shows that presently the police are rarely involved in assaults which involve only marriage partners. The question then arises as to what policies the state should pursue with regard to what is criminal assault in a legal sense but which carries a whole set of other socially accepted connotations as outlined in the findings of this paper.


TABLE 18: PEOPLE WHO HAVE REPORTED MARITAL DISPUTES
TO THE POLICE (URBAN ONLY)



URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

%M
%F
%M
%F
Yes
5.8
18.1
3.4
11.3
No
94.2
81.9
96.6
88.7
Sample size
135
166
88
61

Changing attitudes towards domestic violence


One of the most striking characteristics of the survey data is the consistency with which the urban low income women are both against violence and apparently less violent than the rural or urban elite women. The urban low income men follow this trend but to a lesser extent.


One possible reason for this relates to ethnic background. In the rural survey differences between the regions were noted (with caution, because the four regions are administrative not cultural divisions, although cultural similarities often occur between geographically adjacent or related groups). It was found that there was less domestic violence in the Papuan region than in the Highlands or Momase4 (Toft and Bonnell, 1985). The low income urban survey was conducted in Port Moresby, which is situated in the Papuan region, and Tables 19 and 20 show how the population sample was heavily weighted with Papuans: whereas in the rural survey only 21.1% of the married respondents were from Papuan provinces, this number was approximately doubled in the urban elite survey and tripled in the urban low income survey.


TABLE 19: PROVINCE OF ORIGIN OF RESPONDENTS


RURAL SURVEY: 21.1% of the married respondents were from Papuan provinces; 19.8% of the whole sample were Papuan.



LOW INCOME URBAN
URBAN ELITE

M
F
M
F
Province
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
Central
95
26.0
86
29.1
32
19.5
16
20.0
Chimbu
l6
4.4
12
4.1
6
3.7
2
2.5
Eastern Highlands
42
11.5
18
6.1
4
2.4
2
2.5
East New Britain
5
1.4
23
7.8
l6
9.8
9
11.3
East Sepik
9
2.5
11
3.7
12
7.3
7
8.8
Enga
8
2.2
3
1.0
3
1.8
0
0.0
Gulf
57
15.6
38
12.8
9
5.5
4
5.0
Madang
7
1.9
11
3.7
8
4.9
2
2.5
Manus
3
0.8
5
1.7
18
11.0
14
17.5
Milne Bay
25
6.8
25
8.4
15
9.1
5
6.2
Morobe
27
7.4
12
4.1
7
4.3
3
3.8
National Capital
12
3.3
11
3.7
4
2.4
3
3.8
New Ireland
0
0.0
5
1.7
8
4.9
2
2.5
Northern
21
5.7
11
3.7
2
1.2
2
2.5
North Solomons
1
0.3
2
0.7
5
3.0
1
1.2
Sth Highlands
8
2.2
3
1.0
3
1.8
2
2.5
Western
17
4.6
11
3.7
7
4.3
2
2.5
Western Highlands
9
2.5
4
1.4
3
1.8
2
2.5
West New Britain
2
0.5
2
0.7
1
0.6
1
1.2
West Sepik
2
0.5
3
1.0
1
0.6
1
1.2
Total
366
100
296
100
164
100
80
100

Note: No response was given by 2 males and 2 females in the low income group, and by 14 males and 19 females in the elite group. It is thought that some of the elite respondents did not state their province in the interests of complete anonymity.


TABLE 20: PAPUAN RESPONDENTS



LOW INCOME URBAN
URBAN ELITE
Province
%M
%F
%M
%F
Central
26.0
29.1
19.5
20.0
Gulf
15.6
12.8
5.5
5.0
Milne Bay
6.8
8.4
9.1
6.2
National Capital
3.3
3.7
2.4
3.8
Northern
5.7
3.7
1.2
2.5
Western
4.6
3.7
4.3
2.5
Total
62.0
61.4
42.0
40.0

TABLE 21: RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ON THE ACCEPTABILITY OF
HITTING CROSS-TABULATED BY REGIONS OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA*


Is it acceptable for a man to hit his wife?



ISLANDS
PAPUA
MOMASE
HIGHLANDS
TOTAL

No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
Women










Yes
6
15.8
51
28.0
9
24.3
8
22.2
74
25.3
No
32
84.2
131
72.0
28
75.7
28
77.8
219
74.7
Total
38
100
182
100
37
100
36
100
293
100
Men










Yes
2
18.2
95
42.0
24
53.3
44
59.5
165
46.3
No
9
81.8
131
58.0
21
46.7
30
40.5
191
53.7
Total
11
100
226
100
45
100
74
100
356
100

N.B. 17 cases missing.


Is it acceptable for a wife to hit her husband?


ISLANDS
PAPUA
MOMASE
HIGHLANDS
TOTAL

No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
Women










Yes
4
10.5
63
34.6
16
43.2
14
38.9
97
33.1
No
34
89.5
119
65.4
21
56.8
22
61.1
196
66.9
Total
38
100
182
100
37
100
36
100
293
100
Men










Yes
2
18.2
90
39.6
25
55.6
37
50.0
154
43.1
No
9
81.8
137
60.4
20
44.4
37
50.0
203
56.9
Total
11
100
227
100
45
100
74
100
357
100

N.B. 16 cases missing.
*Because of differences in missing case numbers due to the newly introduced variables, the percentages are not exactly the same as in the original tables but they are certainly comparable.


TABLE 22: RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ON THE PRACTICE OF
HITTING, CROSS-TABULATED BY REGIONS OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA*


Respondents who have hit their spouse



ISLANDS
PAPUA
MOMASE
HIGHLANDS
TOTAL

No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
Women










Yes
6
15.8
46
25.6
7
18.9
12
33.3
71
24.4
No
32
84.2
134
74.4
30
81.1
24
66.7
220
75.6
Total
38
100
180
100
37
100
36
100
291
100
Men










Yes
8
72.7
105
46.9
27
60.0
53
73.6
193
54.8
No
3
27.3
119
53.1
18
40.0
19
26.4
159
45.2
Total
11
100
224
100
45
100
72
100
352
100

N.B. 23 missing cases.


Respondents who have been hit by their spouse



ISLANDS
PAPUA
MOMASE
HIGHLANDS
TOTAL

No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
No.
Wt/Av
Women










Yes
22
57.9
96
53.3
19
51.4
25
69.4
162
55.7
No
16
42.1
84
46.7
18
48.6
11
30.6
129
44.3
Total
38
100
180
100
37
100
36
100
291
100
Men










Yes
2
18.2
68
30.6
17
37.8
40
54.1
127
36.1
No
9
81.8
154
69.4
28
62.2
34
45.9
225
63.9
Total
11
100
222
100
45
100
74
100
352
100

N.B. 23 missing cases.
*Because of differences in missing case numbers due to the newly introduced variables, the percentages are not exactly the same as in the original tables but they are certainly comparable.


In order to test the possibility of regional bias, responses from the low income urban survey were grouped according to regional origin of respondents and Tables 21 and 22 show the situation. The averages have been weighted in order to allow comparison between the four regions and the weighting is equivalent to per cent of the total for each region. The Islands region male category has too few cases for any serious consideration. It is only the other 3 regional groups of men and all 4 regional categories of women which can seriously be compared. In this instance Table 22 indicates that the large Papuan element in the sample is not the cause for the lower tolerance and practice of marital violence amongst urban low income earners.


Ethnic background has influenced other aspects of the results, and a number of interesting lines of investigation appear in the Tables:


A second possible reason for the lower level of violence in the urban low income survey could be associated with the number of women who work. Money matters were rated highly as causes of problems in urban marriages and it is possible that this could be less so among couples where both partners are employed. Data were extracted to see if those cases where both spouses were working differed from the cases where only one spouse worked. No patterns emerged which are indicative of any important differences. This can be seen in Table 23 which shows the two groups are very similar to the mean answer for both groups and to each other. Thus whether one or both spouses are employed does not seem to be an important variable in any prediction of domestic violence. (It may be worth pursuing cases where only the wife has formal employment, but the above samples did not have enough cases to make any judgement in this regard).


TABLE 23: RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ON THE ACCEPTABILITY AND
PRACTICE OF HITTING CROSS-TABULATED BY ONE INCOME AND
TWO INCOME FAMILIES*



TOTAL SAMPLE
BOTH SPOUSES EMPLOYED
ONE SPOUSE EMPLOYED

MALES
FEMALES
MALES
FEMALES
MALES
FEMALES

No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
Is it acceptable for a man to hit his wife?
Yes
171
46.7
75
25.3
34
50.7
21
22.3
131
45.5
53
26.6
No
195
53.3
222
74.7
33
49.3
93
77.7
157
54.5
146
73.4
Total
366
100
297
100
67
100
94
100
288
100
199
100













Is it acceptable for a woman to hit her husband?
Yes
162
44.1
99
33.2
29
43.3
30
31.9
125
43.3
67
33.7
No
205
55.9
199
66.8
38
56.7
64
68.1
164
56.7
132
66.3
Total
367
100
298
100
67
100
94
100
289
100
199
100













Respondents who have hit their spouse
Yes
201
55.5
72
24.3
35
53.8
27
28.7
158
55.2
44
22.2
No
161
44.5
224
75.7
30
46.2
67
71.3
128
44.8
154
77.8
Total
362
100
296
100
65
100
94
100
286
100
198
100













Respondents who have been hit by their spouse
Yes
135
37.3
166
56.1
21
32.2
53
57.0
106
37.7
109
53.1
No
227
62.7
130
43.9
44
67.7
40
43.0
175
62.3
89
44.9
Total
362
100
296
100
65
100
93
100
281
100
198
100

*Because of differences in missing case numbers due to the newly introduced variables, the percentages are not exactly the same as in the original tables but they are certainly comparable.


A third explanation for the different levels of acceptance and practice of domestic violence is age differentials. The elite women are almost all under 30 years of age and it was posited that their youth could account for the differences between them and the urban low income women.


TABLE 24: COMPARISONS OF THE RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS ON THE
ACCEPTABILITY AND PRACTICE OF VIOLENCE BETWEEN THE URBAN
ELITE AND URBAN LOW INCOME CROSS TABULATED BY AGE*



URBAN LOW INCOME
URBAN ELITE

30 years and under
Over 30 years old
30 years and under
Over 30 years old

Males
Females
Males
Females
Males
Females
Males
Females

No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
Is it acceptable for a man to hit his wife?
Yes
92
49.2
46
23.6
73
43.2
28
28.6
28
47.5
26
35.1
37
36.3
0
NA
No
95
50.8
149
76.4
96
56.8
70
71.4
31
52.5
48
64.9
65
63.7
4
NA
Total
187
100
195
100
169
100
98
100
59
100
74
100
102
100
4


















Is it acceptable for a wife to hit her husband?
Yes
91
48.7
56
28.7
63
37.1
41
41.8
28
47.5
27
36.5
32
31.4
0
NA
No
96
51.3
139
71.3
107
62.9
57
58.2
31
52.5
47
63.5
70
68.6
4
NA
Total
187
100
195
100
170
100
98
100
59
100
74
100
102
100
4


















Respondents who have hit their spouse
Yes
108
58.1
42
21.8
85
51.2
29
29.6
35
60.3
32
45.1
64
63.4
3
NA
No
78
41.9
151
78.2
81
48.8
69
70.4
23
39.7
39
54.9
37
36.6
1
NA
Total
186
100
193
100
166
100
98
100
58
100
71
100
101
100
4


















Respondents who have been hit by their husbands
Yes
71
38.6
110
56.7
56
33.3
52
53.6
29
49.2
42
56.8
51
50.5
8
NA
No
113
61.4
84
43.3
112
66.7
45
46.4
30
50.8
32
43.2
50
49.5
0
NA
Total
184
100
194
100
168
100
97
100
59
100
74
100
101
100
8

**NA indicates "not applicable" due to lack of sufficient cases.
*Because of differences in missing case numbers due to the newly introduced variables, the percentages are not exactly the same as in the original tables but they are certainly comparable.


The two urban samples can be compared in terms of age and this is done in Table 24 which sub-divides by sex and by two age groups: (1) 30 years old and under, and (2) over thirty years old. In this table the 30 years old and under group of women in the urban elite sample may be compared with the same group in the urban low income sample for the same four measures as was done for the regional breakdowns in Tables 21 and 22, and for Table 23 showing one and two income families. This exercise clearly shows that the large relatively youthful female component of the urban elite sample has not biased or lead to a difference in the results compared with the relatively youthful group of urban low income women. The latter group still reports a lesser propensity to approve of or accept domestic violence, except in the last category of actually being hit, where the 30 and under urban low income women are receiving marginally more assault than the same age group of elite women. To summarise, it seems that neither regional affiliation, dual family incomes, nor age are the key explanative factors for the variations in domestic violence reported in the samples studied.


A fourth explanation for the lower rate and tolerance of violence among the urban low income women is a marked change in female attitudes and a lesser change in male attitudes. This is suggested by an unexpected factor which emerges in Table 24. What appears is that amongst both the urban low income and elite groups of the 30 and under males, there is a greater acceptance and practice of violence. It is possible that the less submissive stance of the urban women is causing the younger men to attempt to assert their authority in the marital relationship. The younger men feel threatened and are responding violently.


TABLE 25: INDICES OF THE CHANGING ATTITUDES TOWARDS
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
PEOPLE WHO ANSWERED YES TO THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS



Rural
Low income
Urban elite
Is it acceptable for a man to hit his wife?
Males
100
64
62
Females
100
44
63




Is it acceptable for a woman to hit her husband?
Males
100
83
73
Females
100
70
80




Do you ever hit your spouse?
Males
100
84
95
Females
100
73
147




Does your spouse ever hit you?
Males
100
125
167
Females
100
84
93

Table 25 (which converts 'Yes' responses in Tables 8, 9, 10 and I 3 to indices based on 100 as the rural values) clearly demonstrates these changed attitudes. In urban as compared with rural areas, a greater proportion of men are being hit and a lower proportion of women. Also, both sexes in the urban environment demonstrate considerably less acceptance of hitting. These changing attitudes to marital violence must be related to education and experience. This, however, would also account for changes among the elite. It then remains to explain why the urban low income group have a lower incidence of violence than the elite group.


A difference between the two groups is that the elite women and their husbands are under more social and professional pressure than the low income earners. Pressures come from wantoks, who have endless expectations of expenses and expertise; also from the desire or need to maintain a standard of living commensurate with their elite position (including the payment of school fees for all their children); and from t h e need to perform a t work.


The data suggest that among the low income earners, who are, to a large extent, making a success of town life and making adaptations to modernity, domestic violence is less common than among rural people, where old attitudes prevail, and also less than among elite urban people, where particularly the men's behaviour does not conform to the men's own changing attitudes.


CONCLUSION


There is considerable violence within many marriages in Papua New Guinea. The data point to a long rural heritage of domestic violence which is changing in the urban context and possibly lessening as a function of education although the data are not extensive nor clear enough to make any absolute claim regarding trends.


Marriage is basically a civil contract engaged in by the partners (and, according to custom, their extended families) with a complex series of reciprocal rights and obligations. The state has a clear interest in the promotion of harmonious marriage and the lessening of any of its citizens' exposure to violence. However, it faces a most difficult task in the case of marital violence. A strictly legalistic approach cannot solve the problem and runs a risk of worsening the situation.


Marriage is a partnership. The partners depend on each other for psychological, social and economic benefits. In Papua New Guinea, as elsewhere in the world, certain levels of violence are tolerated (or occasionally even expected) in a certain proportion of marriage partnerships. Were the state to attempt to legislate against all marital violence, the result must be to destroy the marriage partnership. When a spouse depends on economic support from the marital partner who is incarcerated for domestic assault the victim of assault must suffer twice: first the assault, secondly the imprisonment of the breadwinner for assault. Needless to say, any children in the family must also suffer.


This is the essential paradox or conundrum faced by the state. Obviously, legislation alone cannot work. Laws for criminal assault are already on the books but the average spouse will not use them to charge the marital partner. Only when the marriage appears to be dissolving and all its various roles are disintegrating may such steps be taken. Otherwise the relationship continues as a partnership, with possible threats of legal action, calls to the police in extreme cases but actual court hearings rarely taking place. The police are often seen in the vague role as mediator because they know, once the dispute is calmed, the partnership will continue.


Whilst doing all it can to facilitate the handling of marital violence through existing channels in the courts and other agencies, the state must turn from dependency on legislation t o other means in any genuine attempt t o reduce domestic violence. Where there is irredeemable violent breakdown in a marriage the state works to protect the victims. This is legislated for already in Papua New Guinea. The effectiveness of the legislation may be questioned because the attitudes of the general population may not clearly support the legislation.


Much domestic violence is the result of accepted attitudes. Any solution to the lessening of domestic violence must attack this core problem. Simply stated, if one's attitude is such that frustrations may be released by hitting a spouse when some perceived fault arises, domestic violence will continue. If the attitude is changed to a belief that it is basically wrong to hit a spouse in the face of frustration then other avenues to vent disappointment and anger will be utilised. It would seem that the state should pursue a course of changing attitudes against the acceptability of domestic violence rather than further punitive legalistic measures which can only weaken the family, a consequence against the interests of the state.


Attitudes and practices do not correlate perfectly in the data but they show a strong trend in the same direction away from marital violence. Attitudes may be held at a variety of levels. Publicly espoused attitudes may not be fully practised in private. Obviously the depth of commitment one has to an attitude will determine how often one acts upon it. Therefore, anyone working to lessen domestic violence faces the difficult task of changing attitudes at very personal and deep levels of practice.


Attitudes amongst some groups do appear to be changing, away from the acceptance of violence. The state should act to further such trends. A positive step would be to sponsor and act upon in-depth studies of families in which violence occurs and in those where it does not. The aim would be first to learn how some couples avoid violence and why others do not. Then work could be undertaken t o promote the type of behaviour and conflict resolution which the non-violent families are using. Work may also be done to diminish the use of weapons, kicking and punching with closed fists, on an assumption that some violence will always be present in some marriages but that its most physically damaging effects may be lessened.


Finally, special attention should be paid to the small group of urbanites whose families are affected by violence which repeats itself at short intervals and shows a high incidence of the use of dangerous weapons. It will be critical to future planning to know if this is a growing trend.


Notes
1 Every household was approached but only those with married women present were surveyed.
2 The National Statistical Office population figure for national citizens in Port Moresby in September 1980 is 112,429, and a compound 4% annual growth rate has been added to reach a figure for September 1984.
3 See definition on page 2.
4 Momase is the current abreviation for the New Guinea mainland coastal
provinces comprising Morobe, Madang, East Sepik and West Sepik.


References
COMMITTEE of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland, 1974 (Reprinted, Sixth Edition), Notes and Queries on Anthropology.
London: Routledge, Kegan and Paul.

NATIONAL STATISTICAL OFFICE, January 1982. Papua New Guinea 1980 National Population Census Pre-Release: Summary of Final Figures. Port Moresby: Government Printer.


TOFT, S and BONNELL, S. 1985 Marriage and Domestic Violence in Rural Papua
New Guinea, Occasional Paper No.18, Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby.


WARUS,J. n.d Ethnographic Data on Marriage in Uma, Kagua. (Highlands Region).
In Toft, S. (ed) Marriage in Papua New Guinea. Monograph No.&, Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby.


CHAPTER TWO
MARRIAGE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
IN TWO URBAN SETTLEMENTS

by Rosa Au

INTRODUCTION


This paper presents one of a series of surveys of domestic violence conducted by the Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea. Its purpose is to provide a link between a survey of culturally homogenous rural communities and surveys of culturally heterogeneous urban communities. The aims were first, to try to discover to what extent domestic violence exists; secondly, to examine attitudes towards marriage and domestic violence, including support systems and ways of coping with the problem; and thirdly, to try to discover the causes of domestic violence.


The population of Port Moresby, the capital city of Papua New Guinea, was 122,761, at the time of the 1980 National Census, of whom 75% lived in squatter settlements and 10% in urban villages2. Urban villagers are people who, generally speaking, live on traditionally owned land around which the city of Port Moresby has expanded. Squatters are migrants from elsewhere who settle on vacant land they do not own. Some squatter settlements are ethnically mixed, but some contain people who come from the same home area in the country and from an ethnically homogenous group within the city. The latter type was the focus for this study on marriage and domestic violence, so that findings from homogenous rural communities could be compared with small-scale ethnically homogenous groups who had transplanted themselves into the urban environment.


Choosing the Sample


Two squatter settlements were chosen:


Ragamuka: near Six-Mile Dump, which is the home of about 700 people from Gumine district of Chimbu Province in the Highlands; a specific section of the settlement with a population of 363 was used for the survey.


Vada Vada: in the East Boroko area of Port Moresby, where two groups of Goilala from Central Province, numbering 333 at the time of survey, live. (The official Vada Vada settlement area includes a separate group of Mekeo people, Central Province neighbours of the Goilala, but they were not included in the survey).


In selecting the sample and location for the study, the following criteria were used:


l. Ethnic Homogeneity: a main objective of this study was to make comparisons with results from the rural study which was also based on homogeneous groups.


2. Workable Size: because of time constraints it was decided that a settlement population of 300-500 would be appropriate, and a minimum of 10% of the populations of each of the two settlements (Ragamuka 763 and Vada Vada 333) was the target number for interview. In my study I interviewed 25 males and 25 females from each of these two settlements, which is a 14% and 15% sample size respectively.


3. Previously Established Contacts: also due to time constraints, and because of the sensitive nature of the study, it was considered important to operate through renewed personal contacts in settlements I had previously worked in.


Methods of collecting data


I attended orientation classes with the Diploma in Social Development students at the Administrative College during November 1982. These classes were on methods of social research in preparation for the rural study and included the preparation of the questionnaire and other methods of data collection.


An interview questionnaire for settlement respondents was adapted from the individual questionnaire for villages designed for the rural survey and a structured interview schedule for persons knowledgeable about the areas for study. (See Appendices 2, 7 and 8).


CHARACTERISTICS OF THE RESPONDENTS


Personal Details


Ragamuka: Of the population of 363 in Ragamuka settlement in December 1982 50 people were interviewed, 25 men and 25 women. Out of the 50, 16 males and 23 females were married (78%). Of the 8 single male respondents, 6 were young men between the ages of 17 and 19 years who were unemployed and living with relatives. There were l8 mature males, of whom 2 were single and 16 married, 24 mature females, of whom 2 were single, and there was one old married female.


Vada Vada Settlement: Out of a population of 333, 50 respondents (25 men and 25 women) were interviewed. Out of the 50 people, 17 males and 20 females were, married (74%). 2 male and 2 female respondents were widowed (8%). Altogether 82% of the interviewees in this settlement were seen as mature or old.


TABLE I: PERSONAL DETAILS OF SAMPLE



Ragamuka
Vada Vada

Age
Males
Females
Sub-total
Males
Females
Sub-total
Total(%)
Young
6
0
6
4
5
9
15
Mature
18
24
42
12
19
31
73
Old
1
1
2
9
1
10
12
Total
25
25
50
25
25
50
100








Marital status






Single
8
2
10
6
3
9
19
Married
16
23
39
17
20
37
76
Widowed
0
0
0
2
2
4
4
Divorced
1
0
1
0
0
0
1
Total
25
25
50
25
25
50
100

From both settlements then, 19% were single and 81% were either married, widowed or divorced; only 15% of the sample were classed as young and, therefore, less experienced in matters relating to the questionnaire than older people.


In both settlements, we were able at times to interview both husband and wife, that is couples, but the majority were respondents whose spouses (if married) were not available for interview.


Employment Details (Table 2)


Ragamuka: It was stated that 16 members of respondents' households, (whether the respondents themselves or otherwise), worked for the government and 24 for private companies. 16 were self-employed on a full-time basis and 41 worked casually: 18 in gardening/selling garden produce, 6 in firewood collecting/selling, 15 in collecting bottles/selling, 2 in other casual activities (e.g. selling betel nut) and 5 in other forms of income-earning capacities. From talking to respondents, it appeared that the black-marketing of beer and prostitution were known to be taking place. However, no respondent acknowledged these forms of activities in the households they were representing. Only 8 respondents stated that both they and members of their household were completely unemployed.


Vada Vada: Responses showed that 9 members of respondents' households worked for the government and 14 worked for private companies; 2 were fully self-employed, 34 were in casual employment: 15 in gardening/selling produce. 12 in firewood collecting/selling, 6 in bottle collecting/selling, one in other casual employ and 2 in other forms of income earning employment. A total of 12 people said they were unemployed in one form or another. Like the Ragamuka group, individual respondents stated black-marketing of beer and prostitution took place, but no respondent acknowledged this for his/her household.


TABLE 2: OCCUPATIONS OF MEMBERS OF RESPONDENTS'
HOUSEHOLDS



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
TOTAL
Government
16
9
25
Company
24
14
38
Self-employed
16
2
18
Casual employment
41
34
75
Other
5
2
7
Unemployed
8
12
20
Total
110
73
183

In both Ragamuka and Vada Vada Settlements unemployment was said to be very high. However, I was unable to obtain exact unemployment figures for these two settlements. Because of the way the question was phrased, 'Are you, or is anyone else living in this house, employed?', in an attempt to discover how many people had access to regular financial support, it is certain that the same employee was cited by more than one respondent. It is also possible that individuals had more than one kind of employment. For this reason the figures do not represent actual numbers of people employed. But it can be said that, of the respondents, 63% of them (80% from Ragamuka and 50% from Vada Vada) lived in households where there was one wage earner or more, working either for the government or private employers, and 20% of them (8% from Ragamuka and 12% from Vada Vada came from households without any specific form of income.


MARRIAGE PROBLEMS


There were a number of stated causes of problems in marriage. Sexual jealousy, a category which includes jealousy, suspicions about adultery and husbands taking new wives, was said to be the highest cause of problems between married 3 couples; 68% of all respondents thought this (see Table 3). Next on the list came what people called a 'lazy wife'. Some wives probably are lazy, but it really means that for some reason a wife does not perform duties or fulfil the obligations expected by her husband, and 59% of the respondents named this as a cause of problems. It should perhaps also be looked at in connection with the category 'lack of respect' because it was men (48%) more than women (22%) who thought this a problem. Maybe when wives fail in their duties some men feel that this shows a lack of respect.


Third on the list, between the categories 'wife's failure to meet obligations' and 'lack of respect', comes 'alcohol'. More women said this is a problem than men, but altogether it was named by 50% of the respondents. Alcohol was seen as more of a problem than gambling, which was placed next by 32% of the respondents, and lack of money, named by 30%, but the three categories must all be linked because money for food is sometimes wasted on alcohol or gambling. In general, men are the drinkers and women the gamblers. Domestic violence was only named as a problem by 26% of the respondents but this, as will be shown later, does not mean that only 26% of the respondents are involved in domestic violence; it is just not seen as a problem in all cases.


Problems over bride-price, children and relatives are at the bottom of the list, and it is interesting to see how low a position is given to relatives in these ethnically homogenous settlements. Perhaps people just accept demands made by relatives, or perhaps it is these low income level people who cause the problems for wealthier relatives elsewhere in the urban setting.


TABLE 3: PROBLEMS IN MARRIAGE



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Sexual jealousy
20
17
11
20
80
62
68
Wife fails obligations
21
13
14
11
70
48
59
Alcohol
10
14
11
15
42
58
50
Lack of respect
10
4
14
7
48
22
35
Gambling
11
10
6
5
34
30
32
Shortage of money
11
6
8
5
38
22
30
Domestic violence
6
13
4
3
32
20
26
Bride-price
6
3
5
4
22
14
18
Children
3
1
1
5
8
12
10
Relatives
2
0
4
2
12
4
8

Note: Respondents were asked to name three causes if possible.


People were asked whether they discussed their marital problems with anybody. Table 4 shows the answers to this question. Over twice as many people said they do discuss these problems as people who said they do not.


TABLE 4: DO PEOPLE DISCUSS THEIR MARRIAGE PROBLEMS WITH ANYONE?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
TOTAL

MALES
FEMALES
MALES
FEMALES
AND %
Yes
14
16
12
15
57
No
3
7
7
7
24
Single N/A
8
2
6
3
19
TOTAL
25
25
25
25
100

Table 5 shows that, when asked who they turned to for advice or discussion, the majority of those who responded stated that help was sought from relatives: mostly their own relatives and not their in-laws. Only 17% of those who responded stated that they sought help from outside their family systems, mostly from village court officials and settlement elders. Only one person claimed to have sought advice from a welfare officer. Failure to seek welfare assistance could be due either to a lack of welfare services, or, if available, the services not being within easy reach. Generally then, when faced with marriage problems, respondents from these two settlements sought advice or assistance from within their own family.


TABLE 5: THE PEOPLE RESPONDENTS TURN TO FOR ADVICE OR
ASSISTANCE WHEN FACED WITH MARITAL PROBLEMS



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
TOTAL
Source of Advice
MALES
FEMALES
MALES
FEMALES
AND %
Father
9
6
3
1
19
Mother
5
7
3
1
16
Brother
7
5
1
0
13
Village Court
2
0
4
4
10
Village Leaders
1
3
2
0
6
Sister
3
3
0
0
6
Children
0
0
0
1
1
Welfare Officer
0
0
1
0
1
Spouse
0
0
0
0
0
Other
7
8
5
15
35

Note: More than one response was sometimes given.


Sexual jealousy featured as the supposed biggest source of marriage problems (Table 3): Questions relating specifically to adultery were asked and Tables 6 and 7 show attitudes towards extra-marital sex. When asked whether it was permissible for a married man to have sexual relations with a single woman, 65% of the respondents (60% of males/70% of females) stated 'No' whilst 35% (40% of males/30% of females) said 'Yes'. The majority of the respondents, 82% (80% of males/84% of females) stated that a relationship between a married man and married woman is wrong. With regard to a married man having sex with a prostitute, only 64% of the respondents said 'No' (62% of men/66% of women).


Men and women seem to share broadly similar views on adultery. The most notable feature of the figures is that men and women in Ragamuka showed less concern than the Vada Vada people about a man having sex with a single woman or prostitute. Their stronger attitude regarding his having sex with a married woman may reflect attitudes towards women who commit adultery rather than men: Table 7 shows very strong attitudes in both settlements against women committing adultery.


TABLE 6: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A MARRIED MAN TO COMMIT ADULTERY?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL
Partner
M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Single woman







Yes
15
12
5
3
40
30
35
No
10
13
20
22
60
70
65
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100








Married Woman







Yes
5
6
5
2
20
16
18
No
20
19
20
23
80
84
82
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100








Prostitute







Yes
12
12
7
5
38
34
36
No
13
13
18
20
62
66
64
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

TABLE 7: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A MARRIED WOMAN TO COMMIT ADULTERY?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL
Partner
M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Single man







Yes
4
4
1
0
10
8
9
No
21
21
24
25
90
92
91
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100








Married man







Yes
2
6
1
0
6
12
9
No
23
19
24
25
94
88
91
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

Divorce


Various factors were given as having contributed to divorce in these two settlements and the pattern is not very different from the reasons given for marital problems. More people thought sexual jealousy contributes above anything else towards divorce - it was mentioned by 58% of the respondents. A wife's failure to meet obligations is thought to be the second most important causal factor, named by 37% of the respondents. Alcohol was third but i t is interesting that only 26% of the respondents felt it contributed towards divorce, whilst 50% felt it caused problems in marriage, though to some extent this will be due to the fact that fewer responses were given to the divorce question: people were asked to name at least three causes of problems, whereas they need only have given one cause of divorce and on average gave only two. Gambling seems to be more of a problem in Ragamuka than Vada Vada and domestic violence featured slightly more strongly in that settlement, as both Tables 3 and 8 show.


TABLE 8: CAUSES OF DIVORCE (OPINION)



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Sexual jealousy
18
15
11
14
58
58
58
Wife fails obligations
15
7
9
6
48
26
37
Alcohol
7
6
3
10
20
32
26
Shortage of money
7
4
6
3
26
14
20
Domestic violence
4
7
3
4
14
22
18
Lack of respect
3
4
7
2
20
12
16
Gambling
7
4
2
2
18
12
15
Bride-price
4
3
4
3
16
12
14
Relatives
5
0
2
1
14
2
8
Problems with children
1
0
0
0
2
0
1
Other
2
0
0
5
4
10
7

Note: More than one response was sometimes given.


Table 9 shows opinions were divided as to whether divorce is more frequent now than it was in the past. Of those people who stated an opinion that divorce is increasing, the highest reason, given by 20% of the male respondents, was Westernisation and breakdown of traditional practices. Female respondents from both settlements disagreed with the men. This was because the male respondents generally felt that women were getting big-headed and not performing duties as required by custom and tradition. Of course, most female respondents did not regard this as a problem. Interestingly, although Westernisation polled highest when respondents were asked why there was an increase in divorce today, when asked for reasons for divorce, Westernisation and breakdown of tradition polled very low and came in the 'other' category.


TABLE 9: IS THERE MORE DIVORCE NOW THAN IN THE PAST?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
16
6
7
8
46
28
37
No
8
15
12
6
40
42
41
Don’t know
1
4
6
11
14
30
22
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

Of the 29% of the respondents who stated they have been divorced at one time or another (Table 10), the majority were male; the highest rate was amongst the Ragamuka men, of whom 44% have been divorced. If single respondents are omitted from the calculations, the overall number of divorcees increases to 36% a very high divorce rate. This situation is possibly being created by the nature of the relationship the settlement has with the traditional home area: defacto marriages involving people who are migrating to and from the rural area may be short-lived. Of divorced male respondents, the largest number gave the wife not fulfilling her obligations as their reason for divorce (59%) (Table 11), while for divorced female respondents, the most frequently given reason for divorcing was sexual jealousy (see definition in Chapter One). Table 11 gives a break up of those respondents who had been divorced at one time or another.


TABLE 10: RESPONDENTS WHO HAVE BEEN DIVORCED



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
11
6
6
6
34
24
29
No
6
17
13
16
38
66
52
Single N/A
8
2
6
3
28
10
19
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

TABLE 11: REASONS FOR HAVING DIVORCED



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA




M
F
M
F
M%
F%
%
Wife fails obligations
6
0
4
2
59
17
41
Sexual jealousy
2
2
1
4
18
50
31
Lack of respect
2
0
0
2
12
17
14
Gambling
1
1
1
1
12
17
14
Relatives
0
1
1
1
6
17
14
Bride-price
1
0
0
0
6
0
3
Money problems
0
0
0
1
0
8
3
Domestic violence
0
1
0
0
0
8
3

Note: Percentages are based on the numbers of divorced persons of each sex (17 males and 12 females). More than one response was sometimes given.


DOMESTIC VIOLENCE


Generally, it was stated that men are entitled to hit their wives, as indicated by 80% of the respondents: 82% of the male respondents and 78% of the female respondents (Table 12A).


TABLE 12: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A HUSBAND TO HIT HIS WIFE?


A: Husband permitted to hit wife (with hands)



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
19
18
22
21
82
78
80
No
6
7
3
4
18
22
20
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






B: Justifying circumstances, given by yes respondents
Wife fails obligations
10
12
7
6
34
36
35
Wife behaves badly
4
8
11
9
30
34
32
Retaliation/self-defence
3
1
4
2
14
6
10
Gambling
2
2
2
0
8
4
6
Alcohol
3
1
0
0
6
2
4
Sexual jealousy
1
1
0
1
2
4
3
Anger
0
0
0
1
0
2
1
Lack of money
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Note: Percentages are based on the total sample. More than one response was sometimes given in Part B.


The main circumstance under which it is felt husbands may hit their wives is when a wife fails to meet her obligations or generally behaves badly (Table 12B). Bad behaviour includes disobedience and also relates to sexual jealousy, which did not directly score highly in these responses compared with responses to the questions on problems in marriage and divorce. It is noteworthy that the women, especially in Ragamuka, were at least as critical of female behaviour as men when it came to women's traditionally subordinate role in marriage. Women still accept that they are not socially equal to men. Neglect of duty was given as the main justification to hit, with the greater proportion of responses coming from men and women in Ragamuka and less from male and female respondents from Vada Vada.


TABLE 13: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A MAN TO HIT HIS WIFE WITH A WEAPON?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
18
15
10
13
56
56
56
No
7
10
15
12
44
44
44
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






Suggested weapons, given by yes respondents above
Axe
6
13
6
10
24
46
35
Knife
9
9
5
7
28
32
30
Stick
8
11
3
6
11
34
28
Spear
0
1
2
3
4
8
6
Other
1
0
0
2
2
4
3








C: justifying circumstances, given by Yes respondents above
Sexual jealousy
6
12
6
11
24
46
35
Wife fails obligations
4
8
1
1
10
18
14
Anger
6
2
3
0
9
4
11
Gambling
0
3
0
0
0
6
3
Alcohol
1
1
0
0
2
2
2
Retaliation/self-defence
1
0
0
0
2
0
1

Note: Percentages are based on the total sample. More than one response was sometimes given in parts B and C.


On the question of whether it is permissible for a husband to hit his wife with a weapon (Table 13A), there seemed to be agreement between the men and women: 56% of both the male and female respondents said 'Yes'. Of the female 56%, 36% were Chimbu, while only 20% were Goilala. Thus, there seems to be a stronger attitude on the use of weapons by husbands amongst the Chimbu group than the Goilala group, 66% of the Chimbu sample favouring the use of a weapon as compared with 52% of the Goilala sample.


Table 13B shows that the most popular weapon was an axe, mentioned by 63% of the 'Yes' respondents, followed by a knife, stick, spear and other weapons such as stones and iron bars. Those respondents who accepted a husband's right to use a weapon to hit his wife generally stated that the main reason entitling him to do this is either when she commits adultery or when the husband suspects his wife of committing adultery and has reason to be jealous. This was unlike responses to the question relating to the general acceptability of a man hitting his wife, when failure to meet obligations and general bad behaviour by the wife were the major reasons. Other stated reasons justifying the use of weapons were anger, drink, gambling and retaliation.


On the question of whether it is permissible for a wife to hit her husband it was interesting to note that 80% of the respondents (the same for both sexes) said Yes (Table 14). The table shows that the major reason given for a wife being entitled to hit her husband is self-defence or retaliation. The second major reason was general bad behaviour by the husband; other reasons in order were sexual jealousy, anger, drinking, lack of money, neglect of duty and gambling.


TABLE 14: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A WIFE TO HIT HER HUSBAND?


A: Wife permitted to hit husband (with hands)
RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
18
20
22
20
80
80
80
No
3
5
3
5
12
20
16
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






B: Justifying circumstances, given by yes respondents
Retaliation/self-defence
7
5
7
6
28
22
25
Husband behaves badly
4
3
8
6
24
18
21
Sexual jealousy
4
6
2
3
12
18
15
Anger
2
3
6
4
16
14
11
Alcohol
3
5
1
2
8
14
11
Lack of money
3
4
2
1
10
10
10
Husband fails obligations
0
1
0
0
0
2
1
Gambling
0
1
0
0
2
0
1

Note: Percentages are based on the total sample. More than one response was sometimes given in Part B.


Concerning attitudes towards a wife hitting her husband with a weapon, Table 15A shows that there was a significant difference of opinion between the two settlements, but within each settlement there was some consistency between men and women. Overall, 52% of the respondents said it is alright for a woman to hit her husband with a weapon, but of the female respondents slightly more said 'No' (52%) than 'Yes' (48%). The Chimbu women of Ragamuka are much more strongly in favour of women using weapons against their husbands than are the Goilala women of Vada Vada. Table 15B shows that sticks and knives are the weapons favoured by women.


TABLE 15: IS IT ACCEPTABLE FOR A WOMAN TO USE A WEAPON TO HIT HER HUSBAND?



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
17
16
11
8
56
48
52
No
7
9
14
17
42
52
47
No response
1
0
0
0
2
0
1
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






Suggested weapons, given by yes respondents above
Stick
10
12
3
2
26
28
27
Knife
7
13
2
4
18
34
26
Axe
3
5
2
5
10
20
15
Others
5
3
1
4
12
14
13
Note: More than one response was sometimes given.








C: justifying circumstances, given by Yes respondents above
Sexual jealousy
8
14
3
5
22
38
30
Drinking
3
4
3
0
12
8
10
Retaliation/self-defence
2
4
1
1
6
10
8
Anger
0
0
3
1
6
2
4
Lack of money
1
1
1
0
4
2
3
Husband fails obligations
2
0
0
0
4
0
2
Gambling
0
1
0
0
0
2
1

Note: Percentages are based on the total sample. More than one response was sometimes given in Parts B and C.


As Table 15C shows, the main circumstance justifying a wife hitting her husband with a weapon was sexual jealousy. The bulk of respondents saying this were the Ragamuka women, who we have already seen are more predisposed to use weapons than Vada Vada women. Drinking was also mentioned as giving cause to hit, and this would possibly be in retaliation; but drinking featured lower on the scale than sexual jealousy, as did anger, lack of money, husband's neglect of duty and gambling.


When given the opportunity to state what proportion of husbands hit their wives in the two settlements (Table 16), over half the respondents said 'many', rather than 'none', 'some' or 'all' husbands hit their wives. The main area of disagreement lay between Vada Vada men and the others, especially Vada Vada women: 52% (13) of the Vada Vada men thought only 'some' men hit wives, but 36% (9) of the Vada Vada women, thought 'all' men do so. Women's estimates of the proportion of husbands who hit their wives were higher than the men's. No respondents claimed that there were no men who hit their wives.


TABLE 16: THE PROPORTION OF HUSBANDS WHO HIT WIVES



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL
Husbands who hit wives
M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
None
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Some
3
2
13
4
32
12
22
Many
15
17
10
12
50
58
54
All
7
6
2
9
18
30
24
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

TABLE 17: THE PROPORTION OF WIVES WHO HIT HUSBANDS



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL
Wives who hit husbands
M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
None
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Some
2
3
15
8
34
22
28
Many
17
16
7
10
48
52
50
All
6
6
3
7
18
26
22
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100

Similarly, 'many' wives hit husbands, in the opinion of 50% of the sample group (Table 17). The figures show general agreement between Ragamuka men and women, and once again Ragamuka seems to have more violence between spouses than Vada Vada.


Opinion concerning whether husbands hit their wives more often today than they used to in the past was inconclusive (Table 18). About one third of the respondents, mainly women, said they do not know. Of those who responded that violence is increasing, most thought alcohol is the main cause, whilst gambling and other general effects of Westernisation were also blamed. The variety of reasons for an increase in violence appears in Table 18B.


TABLE 18: OPINION ON WHETHER DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IS INCREASING


A: Husbands hit wives more than they use to
RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
16
7
8
5
48
24
36
No
5
8
11
9
32
34
33
Don’t know
4
10
6
11
20
42
31
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






B: reason for increase, given by yes respondents
Alcohol
6
3
2
2
16
10
13
Westernisation
6
2
2
1
16
6
11
Sexual jealousy
4
2
1
1
10
6
8
Gambling
5
1
0
2
10
6
8
Wife fails obligations
1
1
0
0
2
2
2
Lack of respect
2
0
0
0
4
0
2

Note: Percentages are based on the total sample. More than one response was sometimes given in Part B.


On the question of support for a wife in the event of her husband using violence on her, Table 19 shows the majority of both male and female respondents stated that there is always somebody to help the wife. Of the 50 male respondents, 47 (94%) said 'Yes' and 3 (6%) said 'No' and of the female respondents 41 (82%) said 'Yes' and 9 (18%) said 'No'. The majority stated that a wife's own relatives would help her (68% males and 62% females). Table 19C shows most respondents stated that a wife's relatives would readily help to avoid serious injury or death though this reply was most popular with the Vada Vada men; the other respondents were more inclined to state that a wife's relatives would help out of sympathy rather than to avoid injury or death. Customary obligation to help was stated in equal proportion by male and female respondents (12% each) but it would seem that violence, though widespread, is to some extent dealt with through the extended family system.


TABLE 19: DOES ANYONE HELP A BEATEN WIFE?


Assistance given to wife when hit by husband
RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
24
21
23
20
94
82
88
No
1
4
2
5
6
18
12
Total
25
25
25
25
100
100
100






People who help
Wife's relatives
21
18
13
13
68
62
65
Husband's relatives
8
7
6
5
28
26
26
Relatives in general
1
1
10
5
22
12
17
Friends/neighbours
3
1
0
1
6
4
5
Others
0
0
3
0
6
0
3








Reasons for helping
Sympathy
13
11
5
10
36
42
3
Avoid injury/death
5
7
16
8
42
30
36
Customary obligation
5
4
1
2
12
10
12
Others
1
1
1
0
4
1
3

Note: More than one response was sometimes given in Part 5.


So far, this discussion on domestic violence has dealt with stated opinions. Now it turns to look at some stated facts. As the 19% of the survey sample population who were single would bias percentaged results of questions, which should only be applicable to the 81 people who have married. Tables 20 and 21 exclude single people. Despite the smaller size of the sample (particularly for parts B, C and D which apply only to spouses who have hit or been hit) it was thought worthwhile to percentage the figures by sex, since they do at least give some indication of broad similarities and differences between the sexes on the topic of domestic violence.


Tables 20A and 21A illustrate the situation: 64% of the married men say they have hit their wives whereas 73% of the married women say they have been hit. On wives hitting husbands, the sexes agree: 58% of the wives say they have hit and 58% of the husbands say the same (interviewees were not usually couples). Injuries were mostly caused by hands. It appears that women were more likely than men to resort to weapons, especially in Ragamuka (Tables 20C and 21C). The main reason that men gave for hitting their wives was the wife's neglect of her duties, and secondly the wife's gambling (Tables 20C and 21C). Women cited alcohol, money problems, anger and self-defence as their main reasons for hitting their husbands. The small size of the sample does not allow women's priorities to be more clearly distinguished.


TABLE 20: PEOPLE WHO HAVE HIT THEIR SPOUSE



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
12
16
11
10
64
58
60
No
5
7
8
12
36
42
40
Total
17
23
19
22
100
100
100






Method, given by Yes respondents above
Hand
12
15
11
8
64
51
57
Stick
4
12
3
5
19
38
30
Knife
2
5
0
2
5
15
11
Stone
1
2
1
0
5
4
5
Belt
0
0
1
0
3
0
1
Iron bar
0
1
0
0
0
2
1

Reasons, given by Yes respondents above
Failure to meet obligations
8
0
5
0
36
0
16
Alcohol
2
5
1
2
8
15
12
Money problems
4
5
0
1
11
13
12
Anger
1
4
1
2
5
13
10
Sexual jealousy
1
2
1
3
5
11
9
Retaliation/self-defence
0
4
0
2
0
13
7
Gambling
5
0
1
0
16
0
7








Frequency, given by Yes respondents above
Every week
0
0
0
1
0
2
1
Every fortnight
3
3
1
2
11
11
11
Every month
1
5
1
0
5
11
9
More than once a year
6
5
7
4
36
20
27
Once a year
1
0
1
1
5
2
4
Less than once a year
1
3
2
2
8
11
10

Note: Percentages are based on the number of married persons in the sample (36 males and 45 females). More than one response was sometimes given to parts B, C and D.


TABLE 21: PEOPLE WHO HAVE BEEN HIT BY THEIR SPOUSE



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA


TOTAL

M
F
M
F
M%
F%
And %
Yes
12
16
10
17
58
73
68
No
5
7
9
5
42
27
32
Total
17
23
19
22
100
100
100






Method, given by Yes respondents above
Hand
10
16
10
18
55
75
67
Stick
8
6
6
6
39
27
30
Knife
4
0
2
4
15
9
12
Stone
3
0
0
0
8
0
4
Axe
0
0
0
2
0
4
2
Iron bar
1
1
0
0
3
2
2

Reasons, given by Yes respondents above
Anger
0
7
4
4
11
24
19
Accused of failing obligations
2
4
1
7
8
24
17
Sexual jealousy
2
1
3
3
14
9
11
Alcohol
3
2
0
3
8
11
10
Money problems
2
2
1
3
8
11
10
Retaliation/self-defence
1
2
1
0
5
4
5
Gambling
2
1
0
1
5
4
5








Frequency, given by Yes respondents above
Every week
0
0
0
2
0
4
2
Every fortnight
6
7
1
1
19
18
19
Every month
1
2
1
0
5
4
5
More than once a year
3
6
6
13
25
42
35
Once a year
2
0
2
1
11
2
6
Less than once a year
0
1
1
1
3
4
4

Note: Percentages are based on the number of married persons in the sample (36 males and 45 females). More than one response was sometimes given to parts B, C and D.


Tables 20D and 21D show that for marriages where there is domestic violence, violent incidents take place more than once a year. Table 21D suggests that 42% of married women and 25% of married men are hit by their spouse at least once a year but not as often as once a month, while a further 26% of married women and 24% of married men are hit by their spouse once a month or more. But it must be remembered that the samples are small.


Tables 22 and 23 show verbal forms of violence. Swearing and using insulting words in public appear to be the most common way to bring shame upon one's spouse, as stated by 68% of the respondents about shaming a husband and 48% about shaming a wife. Shouting out a wrong-doing in public is also shaming and it seems that for a man to physically attack his wife shames her (Table 23). Perhaps it is assumed that if a man hits his wife she must deserve it - it is not a wife's function to annoy her husband. Attacking husbands as a form of bringing shame upon them was only expressed to some extent by Vada Vada women. The key to what is seen to be shaming behaviour is clearly the public aspect of any derision.


TABLE 22: WAYS IN WHICH A WIFE CAN SHAME OR INSULT HER HUSBAND



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
Total

Males
Females
Males
Females
And %
Swear at him publicly
18
20
16
14
68
Shout his wrong-doing publicly
2
3
4
9
18
Attack him
1
2
2
5
10
Tear his clothes
2
2
2
0
6
Court action
0
0
2
2
4
Separate or divorce
0
0
1
0
1
Run away with another man
1
0
0
0
1
Tell him to behave
0
1
0
0
1
No response
5
0
1
1
7






Husbands reaction to being shamed by his wife
Hits wife
18
16
9
12
55
Does nothing
3
8
6
7
24
Kills wife
1
0
3
3
7
Court action
0
0
2
3
5
Divorces her
0
1
3
0
4
Makes a feast
0
0
2
2
4

Note: More than one response was sometimes given.


Having been shamed, Table 22B shows it was a common form of retaliation for the husband to beat up the wife. For the husband to feel ashamed yet do nothing in retaliation is half as likely to happen as a beating. Only 5% of the respondents said the husband might take court action and 7% thought the husband might kill his wife.


On the other hand, if a husband brings shame upon his wife by attacking her physically in public, the wife may retaliate by leaving him or by refusing to fulfil her obligations (Table 23B). Mainly, however, the wife only feels ashamed and continues her duties as normal.


TABLE 23 WAYS IN WHICH A HUSBAND CAN SHAME OR INSULT HIS WIFE



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
Total

Males
Females
Males
Females
And %
Swear at her publicly
14
12
9
13
48
Swear at wife and attack her
7
11
11
12
41
Shout her wrong-doing publicly
2
1
3
5
11
Court action
0
0
2
1
3
Divorce
0
0
1
1
2
Kill her
0
0
0
1
1
No response
6
1
2
1
10






Wife’s reaction to being shamed by her husband
Does nothing
5
8
9
8
30
Leaves home
3
7
6
4
20
Refuses to perform duties
2
3
3
5
13
Hits husband
8
4
0
1
13
Court action
0
0
3
0
3

Note: More than one response was sometimes given.


SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING THE INSTITUTION OF MARRIAGE


When asked to make suggestions on ways in which marriage could be made better within their own communities, respondents expressed a variety of opinions (Table 24). The highest rated suggestion was made by 39% of the respondents 38% of males and 40% of females) who saw a great need for the sale and consumption of liquor to be controlled. The second most important suggestion, made by 31% of the respondents, was that greater respect should be shown for the institution of marriage. Respect for marriage included a need for husbands and wives to love and respect each other more and also a plea that both partners should respect custom regarding attitudes towards bride-price and the treatment of relatives and wantoks (see definition p.2).


TABLE 24: SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF MARRIAGE



RAGAMUKA
VADA VADA
Total
Suggestions
Males
Females
Males
Females
And %
Control use of alcohol
11
9
8
11
39
Increase respect for marriage bride-price, wantoks
6
11
8
6
31
More income-earning opportunities
6
5
9
8
28
Control gambling
8
4
3
2
17
Greater penalties for adultery etc.
4
6
6
1
17
More mediation, counselling etc.
5
4
2
5
16
Increase Christian influence
5
2
4
0
11

Note: More than one suggestion was sometimes given.


More employment opportunities and income-generating opportunities were thought by 28% of the respondents to be the next most important way of improving marriage and living standards. That would remove some of the problems that married partners experience. Tighter controls on gambling, greater penalties for adultery, prostitution and polygamy, better facilities for mediation, including welfare services and an increase in church influence on people's lives were all proposed as possibilities for strengthening the institution of marriage.


CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS


Although the public seems to be aware of domestic violence when they see the results in a black eye or other facial violations, there is an indication that a lot of injuries caused by domestic violence are in fact not generally visible. In Vada Vada, for example, only 14% of the respondents claimed to have been hit on the head or face, and 42% said they had been hit on some other part of their body.


Domestic violence seems to be a widespread practice in these two settlements. Although women tend to resort more readily than men to the use of weapons, there is a tendency for men to hit their wives more often than wives hit husbands. Perhaps women know that they are physically inferior to men so they generally use one form of weapon or another.


It seems to be generally accepted amongst people of these two communities that a man has the right to hit his wife whenever he thinks she deserves it. Furthermore, the women accept this situation and will seek assistance only when they are badly injured. Otherwise, that is their lot as married women.


In the light of my findings I now make the following recommendations:


1. All domestic violence and marriage problems should be referred to family elders or village/settlement elders with a view towards mediation.


2. Where the elders cannot reach a compromise, village court officials should decide what is best for the couple and their children, if any, according to custom.


3. Policemen should be empowered to penalise the aggressor or the violent partner at the scene of the fight if physical assault is obvious.


4. Community governments, or the people of a community, should sponsor a responsible man or woman from amongst their members to undergo basic training in settling family welfare disputes and pay him/her through cash or kind to live and work amongst them in close co-ordination with the village court officials and police.


5. There should be heavier penalties for adultery and both adulterer and adulteress should be equally responsible and equally punished.


6. There should be heavier penalties for domestic violence. The village courts should decide on a form of punishment based on clear guidelines from the village court secretariat.


7. Free legal aid services should be more readily available to lower income earners, through greater use of law students from the University of Papua New Guinea or the Legal Training Institute, as the Public Solicitor's Office cannot meet the increasing demands of city dwellers.


8. There should be a Public Awareness Programme to inform women of their rights as free citizens of this country and inform them of their legal rights if they are the targets for domestic violence.


9. There should be a ban on take-away liquor from current outlets, and the sale of liquor should be placed in the hands of the local community authorities who should also be made to face the consequences of disorder caused by drunkenness.


10. There should be more income-generating projects for men and women in settlements, with available markets nearby, so family life may improve.


11. The Law Reform Commission should speed up work on draft proposals for a National Family Law and submit these through the Minister for Justice to the government for approval and implementation.


Notes
1. This report is based on research carried out as course-work during the final year of a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Social Work at the University of Papua New Guinea. Research assistants were Mrs Lena Ai-Yok Wangatan and Mr Homoka Kovea from the Office of Information, Miss Bospidik Pilokos from Law Reform Commission and Mrs Beverly Doiwa Daniels, a third year Social Work student from the University of Papua New Guinea, and I am most grateful to them for their assistance.


I express my great appreciation to Mr Saraga, Chairman of the Six Mile Village Court Area and big-man of the Ragamuka/Saraga area for his support and assistance in organizing the people for our study. My thanks also go to the people of both the Ragamuka and Vada Vada Settlements for their co-operation and the understanding with which they agreed to be interviewed. Without them this study would not have been possible.


2. For more details please refer to Hugh Norwood's analysis of urban villages and squatter areas in his book Port Moresby: Urban Villages and Squatter Areas, University of Papua New Guinea Press, 1984.


3. Please see the definition in Chapter One of this publication for an explanation of the survey terms 'sexual jealousy' and 'failure to meet obligations'.


Note - This chapter is based on the paper presented to the Papua New Guinea Medical Symposium of 1982. References to work by Hogbin, and Toft and Bonnell, were inserted by the editor.

CHAPTER THREE SPOUSE-BEATING: A HOSPITAL STUDY

by Alec Ekeroma 1


INTRODUCTION


Spouse 'bashing', as it is commonly called, directed almost always at women, has recently surfaced in Papua New Guinea as a social problem. Educated Papua New Guinea women have, through women's groups and the press, expressed resentment and drawn public attention to their plight. Perhaps this mounting awareness of wife-beating as a social problem stems from an increase in incidence, caused by stresses from rapid development conflicting with traditional roles and relationships, or from women becoming increasingly independent and aware of their rights as citizens, as they break ties with their traditional subordinate role, and speak out on a newly controversial topic.


The extent of the problem is difficult to ascertain. Research by Egger and Crancher for the New South Wales Government Task Force on Domestic Violence formed this conclusion (Egger and Crancher, 1982). Many violent incidents go unreported, because pressure i s on the victim (in Papua New Guinea often in the form of physical coercion) not to reveal a 'domestic matter' to strangers, especially to authority (for instance the police). A study by Straus and co-workers produced a statistical estimate that one of every six couples in the United States engages in at least one incidence of violence each year (Gelles, 1979). Results of studies in the modern industrialised world do not apply to traditional Papua New Guinean societies, and as literature addressing this subject in developing countries is minimal, it is impossible to draw meaningful conclusions from them regarding the nature and extent of the problem.


A report on Aboriginal Women and Domestic Violence (O'Shane, 1982) revealed the widespread incidence of domestic violence in Aboriginal communities. It reports a serious assault rate of five times more on Aboriginal Reserves than in the State of Queensland. This does not include unreported assaults: if it did, the rate would probably be ten or fifteen times that of the national figure.


Studies in Papua New Guinea, by Seb Doiwa (Doiwa, 1985) and by Peri Kivung with Maria Doiwa and Susan Cox (Kivung, 1985) touched on the problem briefly. Seb Doiwa, a psychologist, analysed two case studies and discussed them in the context of 'Mental Health and Women Living in Urban Areas'. Peri Kivung and co-workers, lawyers by profession, relied on legal files to discuss 'Women and Crime: Women and Violence'.


This present paper is based on a survey conducted over a ten week period at Angau Memorial Hospital (AMH) Lae. The enquiry was initially to satisfy a personal curiosity about the cause and extent of spouse-beating because of the number of victims presenting themselves to the hospital with serious physical injuries. It then became an attempt to identify contributory socio-economic, cultural or personal factors. Additionally, the study sought to determine whether the victims turned elsewhere for help and, if so, the source and effect of such help.


METHOD


Victims of spouse-beating who attended the hospital were detained by outpatient staff. The author then conducted an interview and completed a questionnaire (see Appendix 2). The interview was conducted in Tok Pisin and the answers recorded verbatim.


The purpose of the survey was explained to both victims and offenders where the latter were present. It was stated that a paper would be written on the findings and that anonymity would be guaranteed. Both members of a couple were interviewed individually and privately after being told of their right to refuse to answer any questions that they did not feel comfortable about.


Help was promised to victims in the way of medical reports to the proper authorities, if so requested. The victims were made aware of the different agencies which could offer help in one way or another. Unfortunately the enormity and nature of the problem made it impossible to offer the kind of counselling and help that was really needed.


For the purpose of this paper, certain terms need to be defined:


Spouse-beating: when a wife, husband or cohabitant has suffered persistent or serious physical assault at the hands of his or her partner. It does not include mental injury.


Traditional marriage: the union of a man and woman according to customary practices, including a form of .exchange, and with the approval of both families.


Legal marriage: marriage according to state law. It includes the signing of a legal document of marriage before an authorised minister of the church, the Administrative Secretary of any Province, or any other person authorised by law. People who are legally married may also have a traditional marriage.


Home province: the province the subject calls 'home', usually the place of birth.


Number of children: only those children born within the present relationship.


Alcoholic drink: any amount of alcoholic beverage consumed prior to the assault.


Years of marriage: does not include any period of time when the couple has stayed apart as a result of legal separation.


Occupation: employment at the time of the survey.


RESULTS


A total of 94 victims were surveyed in the ten-week period of whom 5 came back with the same problem. This is an average of 10 beaten spouses a week reporting to the hospital. In fact the figure is higher because a few of the victims were not interviewed. It is also believed that a few patients did not reveal the true cause of their injuries, or worse, named someone other than the spouse as the offender. If these suspected cases had been included in the survey, there would have been 14 victims per week, or 2 beaten spouses per day.


Of the 94 victims, 91 were women (97%) and only three (3%) were men. Employed people are paid fortnightly on Fridays and perhaps it is not surprising to find an increase in the incidence of violence on Saturdays, especially on pay weekends, when many people have the opportunity to buy alcohol: the probability that violence is alcohol related had been previously established. Violence seems to occur on Sundays with the same frequency as on weekdays, but some of Sunday's day-time patients could be related to Saturday-night incidents.


TABLE 1: VICTIMS' POINT OF CONTACT WITH HOSPITAL



No.
%
Accompanied by spouse (offender)
25
27
Escorted by police
3
3
Referred by the Office of Social Welfare
1
1
Referred by Ramu Sugar Ltd.
1
1
Others (some accompanied by relatives)
64
69
Total
91
101

TABLE 2: TIMES OF VIOLENT INCIDENTS


Day
Day-time
6am – 5:59pm
Night-time
6pm – 5:59am
Total
%
Monday
3
4
7
7
Tuesday
4
9
13
14
Wednesday
5
5
10
11
Thursday
4
9
13
14
Friday
4
8
12
13
Saturday
9
16
25
26
Sunday
9
5
14
15
Total
38
56
94

%
40
60
100
100

TABLE 3: TIME LAPSE BETWEEN THE ASSAULT AND ARRIVAL
AT THE HOSPITAL



No.
%
Within one hour
19
20
More than one hour but less than 6
33
35
More than 6 hours but less than 24
26
28
More than one day but less than a week
14
15
More than one week
2
2
Total
94
100

Fifty-two (55%) of the victims arrived at the hospital within 6 hours of the assault and, allowing for transport difficulties, these patients were considered to be prompt in seeking help. Reasons for delay in arrival at the hospital were not sought, and there was no apparent correlation between the severity of an injury and time lapse in reporting to the Out-Patients Department.

The extent of injuries


On arrival at the hospital injuries were graded for severity and Table 4 gives the picture.


TABLE 4: THE EXTENT OF INJURIES




No
%
Grade 1
a) symptoms, but no physical findings
9
10

b) elicited tenderness or tenderness on
movement
7
7
Grade 2
Abrasions, contusions, haematoma:



a) in one area (eg. black eye)
15
16

b) in more than one area
25
27
Grade 3
Laceration of skin:



a) up to 3cm in length and bleeding
17
18

b) more than 3cm in length or more than
one laceration
10
10
Grade 4
a) fractures including broken teeth
9
10

b) laceration to internal organs
2
2
Total

94
100

This grading system was devised to classify the severity of injuries, but it can also be tentatively used to assess the severity of the assault because the two usually correlate. It is not always possible to know from the injuries the method of assault used. Five of the women bore scars as evidence of previous assaults.


The use of weapons


The weapons used on the 3 male victims were an axe blade, a knife and the tip of an umbrella. It seems that women offenders are more likely to resort to weapons than men. This I postulate as a strategic manoeuvre on the woman's part to overwhelm the man's physical strength. However, the study lacks the number of male victims needed to prove this. It is assumed that injured people reporting to the hospital are those who are seriously hurt - there must be many victims of domestic violence who do not report to hospital either because their injuries are minor or because they are prevented from doing so by circumstance.


The weapons used in assaulting the 91 women were diverse. The number of victims who were assaulted in more than one style was 29 (32%). Most of these women were attacked first with fists then feet.


TABLE 5: MEANS OF ATTACK ON THE 91 WIVES
(multiple responses)


With weapon
No.
%
Wooden object
15
16
Piece of iron
8
9
Knife
4
4
Boot
3
3
Dinner fork (2), rubber hose (2), hammer (2), coconut broom (3), chain (1), belt (1), torch (1), plate (1), pipe wrench (1), bag of coins (1)
15
16
Total
45
48



Thrown object


Stones
5
6
Bottles
2
2
Lamp (1), Tin (1)
2
2
Total





Without weapon


Clenched fist
37
41
Kicked with or without footwear
20
22
Flat of hand/fingernails
6
7
Pushed to floor (2), dragged on road (1), karate chop (1), fingers into mouth (1)
5
5
Total
68
75

Frequency of assaults

Patients were too vague to permit an accurate assessment of the frequency with which they are hit. Most of them replied with comments such as: planti taim (many times), olgeta dei (every day). And during the course of the study, I discovered that planti taim, olgeta taim and wan taim (only once) meant different things to different victims. To one victim, planti taim was about three bashings week, to another, once a month. Therefore, broad categories were used: Frequently (planti taim) Occasionally (wan wan taim) and Never before (namba wan taim).


TABLE 6: THE FREQUENCY OF ASSAULTS



No.
%
Frequently
32
35
Occasionally
36
40
Never before
23
25
Total
91
100

Twenty-five per cent of the victims reported that they had never been assaulted before. This Ifound hard to believe, for a closer look at this group reveals the fact that 12 (48%) of them have been married for five years or more. Additionally, some of the injuries incurred gave one the impression that 'professional bashers' were responsible. An unwillingness to give accurate information could be caused in some spouses by fear of revealing the presence or seriousness of violence in their families. Some couples had been together for a long time and perhaps it was not appropriate to jeopardise the cohesion of their relationship by exposing details of violence in their home to an outsider; they saw their problem as private. There was only one woman who knew exactly the number of times she had been beaten, even though she was unable to count. For each time her husband had assaulted her she had made a knot on a string which she hid. When she could not stand the violence any more, her son (from a previous marriage), reported the matter to the police who then escorted her to hospital. The son counted 62 'knots of assault' in the six-month relationship.


Two distinct patterns of frequency for assaults emerged in the survey. One was the pay-weekend assault and the other was the drunken husband assault. These in fact are generally combined: the man can afford to spend freely on liquor on pay weekends. The pattern of spouse beating then, is intimately related to money and alcohol, components of modern civilization.


There were a few women who indicated a third pattern for the occurrence of assaults. They were only assaulted when they made their men kros (cross). As for the three male victims, two of them were assaulted planti taim - both recounted that when his woman gets kros she beats him up. The third man was dumb, so the wife explained that she fights back when he beats her. She also attacks him once in a while, when his friends take him out. One man displayed scars of previous assaults.


Men may feel reluctant to attend hospital for minor injuries. Masculine ideals of being rough and tough discourage complaints about physical injuries inflicted on men by women, so a hospital study would portray only a fraction of the beaten husband syndrome. However, men lodged complaints with other authorities. Out of a total of 295 beaten spouses who attended the Social Welfare Office in Lae from December 1982 to July 1983, 88 (30%) of them were men.

Hospitalised patients


There were six admissions to hospital as a result of wife-beating. Four of the six were admitted to the Intensive Care Unit. Diagnosis, treatment and days of hospitalisation are listed below in Table 7.


TABLE 7: HOSPITALISED PATIENTS


Patient no.
Diagnosis
Treatment
Days in hospital
1
Lacerated spleen, bleeding
Transfused 3 units whole blood
3
2
Lacerated spleen, bleeding
Laparotomy (splenic repair), transfused 3 units whole blood
12
3
haemopneunothorax
Observation
1
4
Compound fracture right ulna
Antibiotics and plaster of paris
5
5
Lacerated spleen
Laparotomy (splenic repair), transfused 2 units whole blood
18
6
Compound fracture left proximal phalanx (finger)
Antibiotics and backslab
8

Three of the six admissions were splenic lacerations, of which two needed operations (laparotomies). Some victims whose injuries were not serious enough to warrant admission were kept in the Out-Patient Holding Ward overnight for observation.


Alcohol


In reply to a question asking whether alcohol had been consumed prior to the assault, 30% of the patients said that it had. Alcohol has been and still is regarded by women's groups in the country as a major cause of family problems. Liquor Licensing Acts passed in the provinces to ban alcohol sales during certain days are the result of community awareness of the problem.


TABLE 8: WAS ALCOHOL CONSUMED PRIOR TO THE ASSAULT?



No.
%
Frequently
32
35
Occasionally
36
40
Never before
23
25
Total
91
100

A great deal has been written about the relationship between liquor and crime in other countries. Paul Wilson in his book 'Black Death, White Hands' wrote: 'The white man's drug, alcohol, has from the moment of settlement been both deliberately and unwittingly used to fragment community life. From the time the early settlers exchanged alcohol for the sexual favours of black women, to the time money was given for work performed and used to buy drink, drunkenness and alcoholism have enslaved native Australians'. (A figure of 95% of serious assaults and homicide in Aboriginal communities was attributed to alcohol over a given period). However, police studies in West Harlem (New York) of 92 families found that only 30% of the wife batterers were under the influence of alcohol. They concluded that 'emphasis on alcohol a s a trigger to family violence is highly exaggerated'. Papua New Guinea Law Reform Commission figures and our own tend to concur with this but further work is needed on the subject in Papua New Guinea (see Toft S. and Bonnell S. 1985).


Reasons for assault


MALE VICTIMS:


(As one of the men was dumb, only two answered this question.)

- Wife was cross with him for giving only half of his pay-packet (the other half was to pay for an account at a store);

- Wife was angry because he was arranging a court case between some village youths and the village committee.


MALE ATTACKERS:


- "She was laughing for some reason. When I asked her why, she didn't say."

- "She was disturbing my sleep."

- "I stopped her from going to see her parents, she threw a stone at me, so I beat her up."

- "My wife refused to give me the radio."

- An in-law had advised his wife that she should take her child and marry

another man. This made him mad.

- He saw his wife with another man so he got her and beat her in front of policemen to settle the matter.

- He could not find his pocket knife and his wife did not help to look for it.

- "She spends money too much; I had only KIO while my wife spent K70 in five days."

- He came home at 6:30pm and there was no sugar; then he told his wife to get some water to help him swallow his rice. When she refused, he threw a spoon at her, she hit back, so they had a fight.

- The woman was drinking beer and he did not like it. - "Fed up with the woman's family and wantoks (see definition, page 2) coming down and draining my pocket...I told her, but she called me lapun (old) and tipped ice water on me, so I bashed her up."

- She swore at me.


FEMALE VICTIMS:


- "I went to watch a film last night and in the morning he accused me of going with another man."

- "He was jealous of me talking to three men at work."

- "I was with wantoks and when I came home' he beat me."

- "He just hit me for no reason.''

- "I didn't want to sleep with him that night ... but I can please myself."

- "Just jealous."

- "He accused me of going with another man."

- "The husband chase her away, so she went to Mumeng to marry another man, then the husband came up and dragged her down to Lae and beat her.

- He was angry that the lamp did not work.

- "He fought me for no reason."

- She scolded him for taking girls around in his taxi, then he turned around and hit her.

- He was angry when she dropped the rubbish bin and made a noise.

- "He refused to give me money. He slept out three nights in a row, and when I told him to settle down, he said that he was a Chimbu bloke and doesn't have to stay at home."

- "I tried to find out whether it is true that he is going around with prostitutes, but he stoned me out of the office."

- "I don't know why he attacked me."


Ifound that a couple often contradicted each other about the reason for the attack. Each partner was out to prove the other at fault. The quotations above were selected randomly, but they illustrate well the diversity of causes of attacks. The men's violent reactions seem spontaneous and uncontrolled but I shall leave interpretation to the psychologists, for human behaviour is indeed complex.


The responses show that the predominant reason women perceive as the trigger for the man's violence is jealousy. Their feeling is that their men were jealous and suspicious. Men may not readily admit the fact that they are jealous, for to do so would make them appear weak in the eyes of wantoks and peers. The man's actions however, within a defined situation, subtly betray him. It has been suggested that jealousy is not such a problem in a village situation. The village man goes out hunting or gambling with his peers, with full knowledge of his wife's whereabouts and the people she is with. In town, conditions breeding suspicion and jealousy abound. The wife is not seen until after work. She is in an unfamiliar environment with unfamiliar people. Or, if the woman is left by herself at home for long periods of time (while the man is out working or socializing), she may then try to seek friendship and comfort in another relationship.


A good number of women interviewed commented: "man i paitim mi nating" (he fought me for nothing), or something along those lines. Ifind it hard to believe that a man assaults his spouse without a reason, no matter how trivial. A woman does not always know or understand why she was assaulted. I hypothesise here that the offenders have a tendency to communicate their failures, frustrations and fears to their spouse, using a violent medium. The victims have not always been able to decode these complex signals into a clear message.


Remedial action


TABLE 9: REMEDIAL ACTION


Victims reaction to beating
No.
%
No action
49
54
Wait and see/Don’t know
9
10
Action
33
36
Total
91
100



Contemplated action


Court
22
67
Welfare
3
9
Police
3
9
Temporary separation
2
6
Leave man
1
3
Community council
1
3
Facing court action herself*
1
3
Total
33
100

*She beat up her child who refused to go to the store to buy soap. The husband intervened on the child's side and an argument resulted which caused her to be severely beaten. In revenge she sent a stone through the windscreen of her husband's company car. The husband informed the police who escorted her to hospital for treatment.
Note: Percentages in Part B are based on those victims who contemplated taking action.


Reasons for taking no action:


- "I need him to support me."

- "This is the first time. I'll give him a chance."

- "It was not a big fight. He looks after the children well."

- "It's his problem."

- "The man is sorry."

- "We have no real problems."

- "It's. not serious."

- "Ifeel sorry for him."

- She is staying with the man's family and has nowhere else to go.

- Her family is against taking any action.

- "He'll bash me up again."

- Told by the police that if her husband were to go to jail, then there would be no one to support her and children.


About half of the women who opted for no action against the husband could not explain why they decided this. It is possible that they regarded that particular beating as 'corrective' in nature and therefore 'justified'. Most of those women who replied were apprehensive about taking action for fear of reprisals from the men and for fear of being left alone unsupported.


Of those women who contemplated action, most (24% of all female victims) wanted to take their men to court.


Reasons:


- He does not give her money for food; beats her for nothing.

- "He is always fighting me."

- "He'll learn his lesson if he goes to prison."

- "For separation until his head clears up."

- "Divorce and get some money from him."

- "He's too much of a big head."

- She wants compensation for damage to her eye.

- For divorce.


From the study, it seems women perceive the court as correctional authority, wielding a big stick. Inferences drawn from the responses run along the lines: "At the moment, I am fed up with him. Teach him a lesson. If you do have to lock him up, then don't keep him in there too long." They seek revenge or retribution for their injuries through the courts, but are careful not to 'hurt' him too much.


Most of the victims who contemplated action against their men chose the courts. Yet only 5 of the victims actually used this service. The most likely explanation is that the women were either discouraged by court officials from laying charges or, if they did lay charges, changed their minds prior to the court case. In the former, police officers play a major part. They see wife-beating as a domestic matter and the paper work a waste of police time because the victims do not usually turn up to attend the court cases. Police therefore either advise women to drop the matter or refer them to welfare services. They will only act when severe injuries have been incurred.


Assistance received by victims


Before assistance can be granted, help must be sought. Only 32 victims (34%) sought assistance from agencies other than the medical services. Some of them had been in the violent relationship for years, yet lodged no complaint and sought no assistance. Why did they not complain? The first explanation could be to keep the problem of violence in the family. The man may allow the woman to attend hospital for treatment, but he may not allow her to see a counselling agency, for that frequently requires his presence. The second and most likely reason is that hypothesised by Gelles: "unemployed wives with low education, will not do anything when beaten" (Gelles, 1979). Thus the less dependent a woman is on a man, the more likely she would be to seek assistance. Housewives, presumably dependent on the man, constitute 82% of the women in this study.


TABLE 10: ASSISTANCE SOUGHT BY VICTIMS


Agency
No.
%
% who found it useful
Welfare
18
31
44
Family
14
24
36
Police
11
19
46
Church
9
15
33
Court
5
9
60
Local council
1
2
100
Total
58
100

Note: Only 32 victims sought assistance from these agencies. Some people used more than one agency.


Case 1
The woman sought help from the CHURCH who counselled her; her FAMILY also helped. She went to the WELFARE office who eventually helped her to claim custody of her children. There were three COURT cases: the first when she was awarded maintenance for the children, the second was a case against her husband's girlfriend, and the third was to enforce the previous maintenance order.


Case 2
The woman went to the POLICE who referred her to the WELFARE office. The husband persuaded the welfare officer to give him another chance. The CHURCH was also asked to help but every time the husband saw the pastor he ran away, saying he did not want to hear any preaching.


Case 3
The woman obtained a two year separation with the help of the WELFARE service. She asked for help from her CHURCH and because they did not respond she changed church affiliation.


Case 4
The woman consulted POLICE many times who referred her matter to the VILLAGE COMMITTEE (Local Council) and the WELFARE office. Welfare told them to separate. The man lied to the Committee that he paid K1,000 bride-price. The COURT jailed him for three weeks. While the woman was running around between welfare and police, the man was still beating her up.


Case 5
The POLICE arrested the husband twice but on both occasions he bailed himself out. The first time the case came to COURT the woman failed to attend; the second time the couple were told to settle out of court because the medical evidence supporting her claim for compensation for a broken arm was not available (X-ray lost).


Problems other than violence in the relationship of victims


Negative answers were given by 61 victims when asked what general problems existed between them and their spouse, but Ifeel that not enough time was accorded the victim to ponder the question. The replies of those who answered in the affirmative are illustrated in table 11, the ‘other’ category included: money problems, unemployment, cultural conflict and children from previous marriages. The problem with polygamy is the distribution of resources between co-wives.


TABLE 11: GENERAL MARRIAGE PROBLEMS


Problem
No. of patients
% of patients
Wantoks
7
21
Beer
6
18
Jealosy
6
18
Polygamy
5
15
Other
9
27
Total
33
99

As 72% of the marriage unions were traditionally approved (Table 12), support from the family or wantoks should have been there. However, on further questioning it was revealed that a high percentage of those claiming to be married according to custom had not in fact exchange bride-price (Table 13).


TABLE 12: BASIS OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SPOUSES



No. of patients
% of patients
Customary marriage
67
72
State registered marriage
18
19
De facto
8
9
Total
93
100

Included under the 'No' category in Table 13 are promised payments and those who thought the husband had not paid enough. The highest bride-price was K1,600, the lowest was K6. In the strictest definition of traditional marriage then, only 26 out of 71 couples (37%) would qualify.


TABLE 13: THE NUMBER OF MARRIAGES FOR WHICH
BRIDE-PRICE HAD BEEN PAID



Customary Marriages

No.
%
Yes
26
37
No
45
63
Total
71
100

The debate on the pros and cons of bride-price rages intermittently in the daily papers. I will not dwell on these arguments, only emphasise the value traditional society places upon bride-price. It is a bond between two clans which provides protection for a traditional union and security for the woman. For example, in the Highlands, if a man beats his wife unnecessarily, or blood is involved, the wife's family and clan may demand restitution from the man's clan. Therefore, bride-price is an effective deterrent to wife-beating in a cultural setting.


TABLE 14 THE LENGTH OF RELATIONSHIPS PRIOR TO THE ASSAULT



No. of marriages
% of marriages
Less than one year
15
16
One to four years
34
36
Five to nine years
31
33
Ten or more
14
15
Total
94
100

The longest relationship between respondents and their partner was 16 years, and the shortest 2 weeks. The figures perhaps dispel a common myth, that domestic violence relates more to the young and newly-wed learning to live together.


TABLE 15: NUMBER OF CHILDREN AND AGE OF LAST BORN


Years of marriage
No. of children
Age of children in years
10 or more
Range: 0-6
Range: 2/12-13

Median: 3


Average: 3.3
Average: 4.4

Nil: 1

5 to 9
Range: 0-4
Range: 2/12-8

Median: 2


Average: 2.1
Average: 3

Nil: 7

1 to 4
Range: 0-2
Range: 2/12-2

Median: 0


Average: 1.3
Average: 1

Nil: 18

Less than one year
No children

Total and average
108/50: 2.2
137.5/22: 6.3

The intention of asking the number of children in a family was to establish whether domestic violence occurs more in large families than small ones and if the age of the last child is relevant. As seen from Table 15, only 23 (45%) out of 50 couples who have been together for one year or more have live children from the present relationship; the other 27 couples have no children from their relationship. The average number of children born to those who have been married 10 years or more is only 3.3. (This is well below average indigenous family size for the same period of time mentioned). The overall average is only 2.2 children in each family. Therefore, it seems that victims of spouse-beating tend to have small nuclear families. Even though there were breast-fed children in some of the families, the average age of the last born. for the 22 families which have children of their own, is 6.3 years.


Child abuse


There were 57 couples with children in their household (including children who were adopted and from previous relationships). In recording answers to this topic care was taken to differentiate 'corrective punishment' from 'child abuse'. Six children (10.5%) were beaten whilst their mothers were also being abused or assaulted. This includes a mother who was assaulted while breast-feeding her baby. Beyond these incidents aggression towards children was hard to determine.


Social background of victims


There was an attempt to discover if the victims come from over-crowded homes and whether relatives are around to help deter violence.


TABLE 16: TYPE OF ACCOMMODATION



No.
%
Own accommodation
67
71
Staying with wantoks
27
29
Total
94
100

Among the 67 couples who have their own accommodation, between 2 and 15 people were in the house besides themselves, an average of 4. For the 27 couples staying with relatives, 76% of them stayed with relatives of the husband and the rest with the woman's parents or relatives. The average number of people at the wantoks house besides themselves was 6 (between 4 and 13 others). Two couples were living separately at the time of the survey: one because of accommodation problems, the other due to an employment posting. With the housing shortage in many urban areas of Papua New Guinea it is heartening to know that 71% of the victims in this study had a house that they could call their own.


It is difficult to evaluate these figures, but it seems as if the presence of plays a minimal role in the deterrence of violence. This is illustrated by the fact that 6 of the women were assaulted in their own wantok/parents' home. Another example is that a woman's brothers were looking on while she was assaulted. In another case, the man admitted that his brothers were holding the woman down as he assaulted her.


TABLE 17: THE INVOLVEMENT OF THE EXTENDED FAMILY


Are they involved?
No.
%
No
74
79
Yes
15
16
Unaware
5
5
Total
94
100

It seems that 79% of the couples did not have any family interference in their problems. It is either that, or perhaps a good number of women hide their marital problems from their own and their husband's families. In Papua New Guinean society, the woman is held responsible for the lushness of the garden, the deliciousness of home-baked sweet-potato, the caring for children and the success of a marriage. Failure to meet these social expectations as a mother and wife may result in her being victimised by either family. Of the 13 who experienced negative family involvement, three mentioned the mother-in-law as the problem.


PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE PATIENTS


Age
About half of the women in the study did not know their age or that of their spouse. It was observed that they were middle aged to elderly women, with a few young adults. Of the half that did know, ages ranged from 17 to 30 years and the majority were in their early twenties. For the men whose ages were known, the majority were in their late twenties and early thirties, with a range of 18 to 35 years.


Home province
Since the study was in Lae, the provincial capital of Morobe Province, it could be expected that most of the patients would be from Morobe. However, the Highlands Highway links Lae to all Highlands provinces, and to Madang, so it is easy for people from the Highlands to migrate to those centres. The movement of people from communal, extended family residences to conjugal family residences can be a problem because of the way it changes patterns of relationships.


TABLE 18: PROVINCE OF ORIGIN


Province
Male
Female
Total
Morobe
22
27
49
*Chimbu
20
24
44
*Eastern Highlands
7
11
18
Sepik, East and West
11
4
15
Madang
9
6
15
*Enga
7
7
14
*Western Highlands
6
5
11
West New Britain
1
3
4
Northern
3
1
4
Central
1
3
4
Gulf
3
1
4
North Solomons
3
-
3
Manus
1
1
2
Western
-
1
1
Total
94
94
188

*Highland Provinces


Table 18 shows the home province of survey couples. The number of couples where both partners came from the same province was 51 (54%). In 1980, 4,214 Chimbus were residing in Morobe Province, the majority in Lae. Out of Lae's population of 61,000 they represented only 7%, yet Table 18 shows that there is a large number of Chimbus among the patients (23%). People from the Highlands provinces totalled 46% and only 26% were from Morobe.


Are the Highlands people more aggressive, and therefore more inclined to violence, than the other groups? In the Highlands region, violence is employed successfully in the protection of territorial rights and effecting restitution. Perhaps then, wife-beating is perceived as a means of solving marital problems and exerting social control over women. Empirical studies have shown how Highlanders are encouraged by cultural tradition to be aggressive (Hogbin ed., 1973). Studies of violent criminals tend to illustrate that the more individuals are exposed to violence as children, both as observers and victims, the more they are violent as adults. The explanation is that the childhood experience with violence teaches the individual both to approve of the use of violence and to be violent.


Counselling agencies in Lae rate cultural conflict as one of the major causes of marital problems. Men and women of different backgrounds and cultures meet in towns. The result is 'town marriages', which are potentially unstable. Cultural conflict was not likely to have been a problem for 54% of the couples, although the fact that people are from the same province still does not entirely remove the possibility of culture conflict when they come from different ethnic groups within the province.


Religion
A question on religious affiliation was intended to reveal any bearing the Church may have on the control of domestic violence. Unfortunately, proper statistics were not obtained, so comparison between different denominations is impossible. One trend does emerge, however, that few of the couples in the surveys are regular church-goers. This applies particularly to the men. Only one man and one woman stated that they were not affiliated to any church.


Occupations


TABLE 19: OCCUPATIONS OF THE WIFE-BEATERS



No.
Unemployed or self employed
12
Manual labourers
10
Clerks and machine operators
11
Drivers
8
Sales managers and other managerial posts
7
Mechanics and welders
6
Sales reps
5
Carpenters
5
Storekeepers
4
Security
4
Police and defence personnel
3
Teachers
2
Hotel waiter
2
Others: male nurse, finance inspector, businessman, plumber, scientific officer, beer-bottle inspector, butcher, photographer, entertainer, theatre attendant, public servant and a "pick-pocket".
12
Total
91

It is clear from Table 19 that wife-beating is a phenomenon present in all social strata, from the labourer to the manager. This is consistent with studies done elsewhere (Gelles, 1979).


Of the 91 female victims, 76 (84%), were housewives. As the majority resided within the Lae city boundaries where land is very limited, self-employment in the way of gardening was not possible. Of the other l5 female victims, there were: 5 clerks, 3 typists, 3 domestic servants, 2 shop assistants, one teacher and one telephone operator.


TABLE 20: RANGE OF FORTNIGHTLY WAGES (MEN ONLY)



No.
%
Less than K25
1
1.5
K25 to less than K50
7
10.3
K50 to less than K100
28
41.2
K100 to less than K150
18
26.5
K150 to less than K250
9
13.2
More then K250
5
7.3
Total
68
100

Note: The kina is approximately equivalent to the United States dollar (1985).


Income
Of the 68 men whose income was known to the wife, 14 (15% of the whole sample) earned more than K150 a fortnight, which is adequate to support a relatively comfortable life-style; 46 (49%) earned between K50 and KI50, which in town may not be enough to support the immediate family, regardless of obligations to the extended families of both husband and wife.


In the rural villages, women are the providers of food. They have their own gardens, do the cooking and tend to the family. They are very much independent of the men. Displaced from this environment, men are forced to be the providers, for there is no garden. Men feel burdened with the weight of an added responsibility, so on pay-day, when their wives ask for money, there is a reluctance to share it, for they feel that it is their money. An argument ensues and violence may then be used to resolve the dispute. Unfortunately, this study could not assess how much of the man's pay packet goes towards providing for the family.


CONCLUSION


As Papua New Guinea, with its rich cultural heritage, marches proudly to join ranks with the modern world, social problems such as wife-beating seem almost unavoidable. Wife-beating has surfaced as a social problem, as stresses caused by rapid development conflict with traditional roles and values, and as women become more educated and self-aware. Research into the causes and the extent of domestic violence in the country has been lacking. Even though the magnitude of the problem cannot be ascertained from this hospital study, I hope it has nonetheless contributed towards a greater understanding of the situation.


The prime purpose of defining problems and their causes is to effect sound solutions. Refuges for women have been found elsewhere to be an effective way of helping and the idea has been suggested for this country (Doiwa, 1985). Unfortunately such a venture would be costly and is therefore considered impractical by money-conscious bureaucrats. The answer is somehow to build on what we already have.


Doctors and police have been dubbed the 'frontline agents' and are accused of being insensitive and failing to provide emotional support or practical help in terms of referral to other agencies. The accusations are generally justified. Members of the Health Department, medical and nursing alike, have been notorious for their 'take-an-aspirin-for-pain' attitude towards the victims of domestic violence, and have rarely sought consultation with counselling agencies and police.


I conclude with some suggestions:


1. A better referral system should be effected between the 'frontline' and the counselling agencies, so as to facilitate help for the victims.


2. Nurses in hospital must be given the right to refer battered patients directly to the police, social workers, pastors, or welfare agents (if the patient so wishes).


3. Policewomen with basic training in social work should attend to the female victims, so that they may receive a more sympathetic hearing and hence suitable and immediate action.


4. The unemployed should be encouraged to go back to the land, through the introduction of small agriculturally based incentive schemes.


I shall leave you to ponder on solutions, for indeed, the answers lie not in the stars but within ourselves.


Notes


1. This study was made whilst I was working at Angau Memorial Hospital in Lae. It would not have been possible without the help and encouragement extended to me from people there. Special thanks are due to the Out-Patient Staff and to the Medical Superintendent, Dr. Saott, who gave permission and time for the study. I was very fortunate to have the help of Dr. Sandra Egger, Director, Bureau of Criminal Statistics and Research for the New South Wales Government. She provided a list of references, an article, and much needed encouragement. Local sources of information were invaluable. Rev. Trantow of Social Concerns, Mrs Vicki Aitsi of Social Welfare and Sub-Inspector Pati of Police Prosecutions provided me with much insight into the problem. Odette Harmsen and Evelyn Gravador helped in proof-reading and typing respectively. The University of Papua New Guinea Library supplied the research material within a week's notice. My final thanks I owe to my patients, who helped me to 'see' a bit of myself.


2 K=kina, approximately worth US$l, (1985.)


References


DOIWA, S., 1985. Mental Health and Women Living in Urban Centres; in Peter King, Wendy Lee and Vincent Warakai eds. From Rhetoric to Reality? pages 162-1 65. Papua New Guinea University Press.


EGGER, S.J. and CRANCHER, J., 1982. Wife battering: Analysis of the victim's point of view; in Australian Family Physician Vo1.l l No.1 l November 1982.
FREEMAN, M.D.A.. 1980. Violence in the Home. Gover Publishing Co. Ltd., London.


GELLES, R., 1979. Family Violence. Sage Publications Inc., London.


HOGBIN, IAN ed. 1973. Anthropology in Papua New Guinea Melbourne University Press.


KIVUNG. DOIWA, and COX, 1985. Women and Crime: Women and Violence; in Peter King. Wendy Lee and Vincent Warakai eds. From Rhetoric to Reality? pages 74-80. Papua New Guinea University Press.


O'SHANE, P., 1982. Report on Aboriginal Women and Domestic Violence, Government
of New South Wales.


TOFT, S. and BONNELL. S., 1985. Marriage and Domestic Violence in Rural Papua New Guinea. Occasional Paper No.19. Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby.


WILSON, P., 1982. Black Death, White Hands. Ceorge Allen and Unwin, Sydney.


CHAPTER FOUR
MARITAL VIOLENCE IN PORT MORESBY:
TWO URBAN CASE STUDIES

by Susan Toft


INTRODUCTION


Surveys into domestic violence conducted by the Papua New Guinea Law Reform Commission show that 67% of rural women and 56% of urban women have been hit by their husbands (though not necessarily with regularity) (Toft and Bonnell, 1985; chapter 1 this volume). Whilst the surveys recorded the incidence of marital violence and its stated causes, detailed case studies enable a deeper examination and better understanding of why the violence occurs. This article seeks to identify causes of marital violence in urban Papua New Guinea through a close examination of two case studies.


The two cases presented here are both true, only the names are fictitious. I t is difficult to say that they are typical of the violent relationships that exist between many spouses in urban Papua New Guinea today because each case has its own characteristics which make it unique. They are certainly atypical in that both women displayed great determination in attempts to end a bad situation by eventually taking their problem into the public arena to seek help from the courts; usually when a man hits his wife, it is seen by the general public as a personal matter, one which should be kept in the home. There are similarities between the two cases however which are not atypical of other such relationships and which make them interesting to examine.


Rose and John's Story


Rose was born in 1957, the fourth in, what is for Papua New Guinea today, an average size family of six children (two boys and four girls). Her mother had completed primary school and her father, also literate, worked as a Catholic catechist. His work took the family away from their home area and Rose was born in another province. In as much as she grew up away from extended family ties in her village she did not have a typical traditional upbringing but her early years were spent in rural villages. She completed high school and went to a secretarial college in another provincial capital for two years in 1973 and 1974, after which she was employed as a secretary in a government department in the same town. Quite early in her time at the college she met John. He is from her home province but not from her own ethnic group. They established a de facto marriage relationship when in 1977 she became pregnant and began to live with him.


Her parents were particularly upset by her pregnancy. They had in fact already accepted half the bride-price payment for Rose from the family of a young man in their home village. Rose and the young man had met during a holiday period at home and both families had been eager to arrange a marriage between them. He had completed high school and was working in the provincial centre. The proposed marriage was now, however, abandoned and the boy's aggrieved parents demanded repayment of the bride-price.


From the time they lived together, Rose was being hit regularly by John. It was a weekly event often severe enough for her to require medical attention. She says the main reason for the beatings was his jealousy of her absentee fiancé and of her working situation among other men, with whom he accused her of flirting. He also accused her, unjustly she says, of not fulfilling household duties. The beatings were all after he had been drinking alcohol and were associated, she believes, with peer group pressure. This pattern of behaviour is not uncommon in urban areas today. Men tend to mix, as they would traditionally, among themselves. They socialise in groups while the women stay at home and a man who appears to be tied to his wife's apron strings is teased or ridiculed. If a car with a few friends called for John to go out drinking, as often happened, he was under strong social pressure to comply.


In January 1978 John moved to another provincial centre to take up a new post. Rose joined him five months later, after the birth of their first child. Four months after that, and following several heavy beatings, Rose, on her own initiative and without her husband's knowledge, bought herself a ticket to go home to her parents. Very few Papua New Guinea women would have either the financial or personal resources to do this unaided.


Initially her parents encouraged her to stay with them and to end her relationship with John. But after two or three weeks a letter came from John to one of Rose's brothers. It contained threats, instructions that Rose should be returned and arrangements for his payment of her air fare. Her family's attitude then changed. They were afraid that John would attack them through magic if they kept Rose with them. He is from an area not too distant from their own which is renowned for strong sorcery. So, after an absence of only five weeks Rose and the baby returned to John.


By the end of that year, 1978, John decided to move to the capital city Port Moresby and by the end of 1979 he was in his second job there as a clerk in a hotel. Their second child was born in 1980 and in 1982 John paid bride-price to Rose's parents. This formalised their marriage and the status of the children. Rose's father was not optimistic about the durability of the relationship however and did a most unusual thing. He did not distribute the wealth among the extended family, but banked the mainly cash elements of this exchange, saying that if Rose ever wanted to end the marriage it could easily be returned.


Throughout periods of employment John has contributed his pay to help Rose maintain the family and she does not criticise him for misuse of money. The weekly beatings continued though, usually on Saturday nights when he had been 'out with the boys'. In the middle of 1983, when Rose was eight months pregnant with their third child, John began to complain about severe headaches and stopped going to work. They heard of a special 'medicine man' in one of the distant provincial capitals. Rose paid for his ticket out of her earnings and John left for two weeks in search of treatment. A longer period was not possible because he was needed to look after their two children whilst she delivered the third.


John in fact stayed away for two months, returning well after the birth of the baby. Rose heard gossip that his prolonged absence was because he was having an affair, but she did not know whether to believe it. She had discovered however, that he had been sacked from his hotel job because he had been found using one-of the rooms with a woman. She realised the headaches had been a phoney excuse for not going to work after his sudden dismissal and that the journey for treatment had not really been necessary.


The day after his return he complained about pain in his bladder. She was suspicious, so refused him sex, for which she received a beating. The next day she gave him the money for medical treatment and later through her own ingenuity, she discovered that he had been diagnosed as having a venereal disease. In due course Rose confronted John with the knowledge she had collected. He reacted by beating her heavily and evicting her from their home, telling her that he never wanted to see her again as he was planning to marry someone else.


She took refuge with a woman from her home village who luckily had adequate accommodation, and a period of separation began during which care of the children was a central issue. Both parents wanted them and there was a great deal of harassment from John at this time. Rose took herself to the Public Solicitor and in due course a case was brought before the National Court which resulted in Rose being given custody of the children.


Pressure was brought to bear on Rose from three directions. Firstly John's relatives with whom she had lived and socialised most in Port Moresby abused her for taking marital problems to a high court. The women told her she was arrogant. They said that she suffered at the hands of her husband no more than the average woman and asked why she thought she was so different that she had to go to court. They attended the court hearing in numbers and abused her loudly and publicly outside the court after the decision in her favour, and they were generally aggressive if they met her about town. A point to be mentioned here is that, having paid bride-price, traditionally a father could have been seen as rightful custodian of the children in the event of divorce, but not if he was considered to be at fault.


A second source of pressure was from John, who was aggressive before the court case but much more so after it. He made harassing phone calls to if office and would constantly come to the house where she and the children stayed, beat her, damage property (the building, but he also, for instance, on one occasion burnt all her clothes) and generally made a nuisance of himself. The situation became intolerable. Rose was arriving at work beaten up, and on more than one occasion the office staff had to find clothes for her, because she was so dishevelled and had nothing to wear except a laplap (piece of cloth tied around her). She went to work because she was afraid of losing her job, and therefore her economic independence, but also because she had nowhere else to go for shelter and support. After several weeks this led to a formal court order restricting his access to her
premises. There then followed an uneasy truce, during which Rose allowed him to visit the children, on condition his behaviour was acceptable.


Another incident towards the end of 1983, for which she cannot actually blame any individual, involved a phone call to say her mother had died and she was needed at home. Whether it was thought she would not take the children with her is speculation, but with borrowed money she did manage to take them, and arrived to find the story was false, her mother was alive. She returned to Port Moresby after about five weeks, mainly because of her job, and she brought the children with her fearing they would not be properly fed and cared for in the village.


A third source of pressure was from her own family, during her visit and by letters and phone calls afterwards. They think it will be difficult for her to manage alone. She is, in fact, unusually self-sufficient and disagrees with this, but she feels the weight of pressure from them. Maybe her brothers fear she will eventually make demands on them. They have certainly reminded her of possible recrimination by magic. As mentioned above, Rose's family are afraid that if she pushes him far enough John may take his revenge on one of their members at home in the village.


Throughout this period Rose struggled to fulfil her job. She maintained the children entirely herself because at the time she was granted custody John was unemployed and therefore no maintenance grant had been imposed. Gradually John calmed down, so that by mid-1984 he suggested that they should try to reopen their marriage. He said he realised she had defeated him and that he had been wrong in 'listening to too much talk' from his relatives and friends about 'their problem'. She told him he showed no respect for her; she would not change her ideas or behaviour; he could change if he wanted to, but she would not.


One day he rang her in the office and asked if he could go to her friend's house, where she stayed, to collect some shoes he said he had left on his last visit (he had arrived with them on and left barefoot). She arranged for him to have access to the house that lunch time and when she arrived home after work she found that he had brought a vehicle and removed all her and the children's belongings to a house he had been newly allocated with a recently acquired job. He had hung her curtains and tried to make the place like home. She was obliged to stay that night because of the problems of returning, after dark and with the children, to her old house, empty of their belongings. And Rose stayed on there, initially tentatively, but when she saw John was making a genuine effort to co-operate she settled down.


Unfortunately John's new mood only lasted about four months. The first time he hit her after that was to admonish her for shaming him through the court. Now, a year later, he is hitting her twice a week. She is often forced to seek medical attention and take time off work. Recently she had stitches above an eye and could not eat for two days because of a swollen neck and throat after a beating. She says their arguments often start over household responsibilities. He accuses her of not doing his laundry or cooking his food according to his requirements, then she criticises him for spending his time with friends, not being an attentive father and not being prepared to help her with domestic necessities, such as going to the market and carrying back food, when she has a full-time job in addition to running the home. He then tells her she should not 'talk back' at him, and the quarrel escalates. Her full salary is spent on domestic requirements but nowadays only half of John's pay goes towards the home, the other half being for his social activities with friends, mainly at weekends when he is hardly at home. So despite the fact that he will not help in the house he benefits from the contribution made by her salary.


He has also reverted to 'phoning her constantly at work, sometimes every half hour, to make sure she is not sneaking out. He is, without justification, jealous. He presumably knows that she is unhappy and therefore suspects that she may be casting her net elsewhere.


Rose is now seriously considering reviving her court action. She says, 'He can't change. Some men are like that'. If she could only find accommodation for herself and the children she would seek custody of the children and then probably move back to her parents in the village, although their fear of John's threat of magic is still very real.


Margaret and David's Story


Margaret was born in Port Moresby, the capital city of Papua New Guinea where her father was a government employee. Her mother had left their home village in a distant province to join him, and all the children, seven boys and two girls, were born there except for the first one. So in the early years Margaret grew up in the capital and just returned to her 'home' province for visits when her father went on leave. When she was in her teens however her father died and her mother returned with the children to their province where Margaret completed high school. The family are Catholic. She did well at school and went to university when she was nineteen, at the beginning of 1974, where she met David.


David, seven years older than Margaret, is from the same home province as she, but is from a different language group. Like Margaret his family is Catholic and his father was a government employee. He was a bright child and was sent through the church to high school in Australia; he returned to Papua New Guinea for university and was well into his degree when he met Margaret.


Margaret became pregnant in June the year of their meeting and this led them to plan marriage. However, one Sunday at the end of November when they were travelling together in his car, he suddenly took offence at the fact that she was smoking a cigarette (it is traditionally common in Papua New Guinea for both sexes to smoke tobacco but David is not himself a smoker). He stopped the car and pulled her out of it into a roadside ditch with such violence that the pregnancy miscarried the following day. By default, in time the marriage plans were shelved.


Margaret says that this was the first time she realised how aggressive and violent David could be, but she did not then assume that it would become a characteristic of their relationship. She understood, however, that his dislike of smoking was strong, so after this incident she gave up the habit and did not return to it for nearly ten years. In retrospect she thinks that this was part of a pattern of submissive behaviour (expected and demanded by David) which subconsciously operated to support David's control through violence. At that time he hit her approximately once every two months, usually because he felt she had failed to comply with his expectations in some way, but she loved him and kept hoping that things would improve. He was often contrite after violent scenes and although he would not apologise he would be subdued and try to help her in small ways.


They went for the long Christmas vacation to their province and although David stayed for a while with Margaret's people he did not discuss with them anything to do with marriage or bride-price as might have been expected. They drifted into a de facto relationship and when Margaret became pregnant again a few months later they did not marry. She had a baby girl early in 1976. By this time she had completed two years at university and had taken off the first semester of 1976 for the birth and care of the baby. David had graduated, joined the Public Service and had been allocated a government house where they lived. She became absorbed in the baby, stayed very much at home, placing few demands on her husband for outings or entertainment and seeing very few friends.


When the baby was about three months old, Margaret formed a suspicion that David might be seeing another woman. This was based on a reminder David had written himself and left in a shirt pocket which Margaret found when she did the laundry. Margaret and David had shared an interest in sport and during Margaret's period of maternity David had maintained his sporting activities alone. The Saturday following her discovery of the note, Margaret insisted on going with David to the sports ground as a spectator. There she met friends she had not seen for months and discovered in fact that David was known to be having an affair. On the way home in the car she stood up to him, for the first time ever, and confronted him with this story, which he neither denied nor admitted. That evening, uncharacteristically, David stayed at home with Margaret instead of going out with friends. She thinks this was to prevent her from leaving.


The next day, Sunday, when David went out, Margaret took some of her and the baby's belongings by taxi to her brother's house. It was not until Monday evening that David came to look for her there. Margaret chose to remain at her brother's and David left, embarrassed because he considered that she had taken what he felt was their own domestic problem beyond the house. He did not know that Margaret had decided to travel to her home province so that she could get away from the situation and later leave the baby in the care of her mother before resuming her studies at the university as she had originally intended. She had decided to end the relationship with David and made plans to effect this.


During Tuesday, when Margaret was alone with the baby, David arrived and wanted her to go back to their house. She refused, so he grabbed the baby off her lap and took it out to the car. He gave Margaret an ultimatum and said he was keeping the baby, so she could decide to go with them both or stay behind. She went with him. (All else apart, the baby was still being breast fed.) He began to change door locks on their house so that she would not have free exit or entry.


On Wednesday her brother came when David was at work, to see how she was, and she returned with him to his house where David visited that evening and where, in front of her brother, his behaviour was controlled. On the Friday she kept to her plan and unknown to David left for the provinces. So at this point of the relationship Margaret took deliberate, active steps to end it.


David of course learnt of her whereabouts from her brother. He started to write letters, sometimes as many as three a week, saying how he missed her and the baby. And she discovered she was pregnant again. He announced that he would shortly take leave and join her in the village. Because of this and the pregnancy she postponed plans to return to her studies.


David spent about two weeks in Margaret's village, during which time it would have been appropriate to discuss marriage arrangements, including brideprice. But David did not broach the subject and being aware of the problems, neither did her family, so the matter was ignored. David then decided to visit his own village, in another area of the same province, taking Margaret and the baby with him to introduce them both to his parents. This was a very definite statement of intent and Margaret was swept along in his wake, naturally submissive, genuinely caring for the man, and mother of his, soon to be, two children. They returned as a family to Port Moresby. Much later Margaret discovered that during her absence from town the woman with whom David was involved had at times stayed in their house with him.


A second daughter was born in the second quarter of 1977 but the pattern of the de facto relationship did not improve. David became something of an absentee husband, with a licence of his own. He would beat Margaret whenever he felt she was not behaving as he expected a wife to do. On one occasion, for instance, he came in at three o'clock in the morning, dragged her out of bed and beat her because he was hungry and no food awaited him. Sometimes he had been drinking, but Margaret stresses that his violence was not closely associated with alcohol consumption. He would usually hit her on the body where it did not show in public.


At the beginning of 1978 Margaret returned to university. She had no co-operation from David. She had to go home after classes and stay there - library study was impossible - and his expectations had to be filled regardless of the fact that he himself was leading a virtually independent life. Through his work David (with his wife) was invited to many social functions to which he could easily have taken Margaret, who is educated and socially adept, but he never included her in his social life. This is not unusual among Papua New Guinea couples. On marriage, men usually continue to socialise in the way they did when single so the only aspect of their life-style which changes is the strictly domestic one where a wife, rather than a mother or sister, performs domestic duties for them and stays at home. Later, when Margaret had social obligations through her own job, David would refuse to accompany her or even assist or chaperone by driving her; she had to arrange alternative means of transport.


Margaret completed her university degree at the end of 1979 and started work that November. She had found a good position in a private firm and began to make a substantial contribution to family expenses. A brother of hers however was the one who made the initial payment of a fare for a young sister to come from the provinces to mind the children whilst Margaret was at work. A third daughter was born in mid-1980, but three months after the birth she discovered that David was still seeing the same woman (now married) with whom he had been having an affair for four years; since 1976. When she spoke to David about this he told her, 'You would not understand'. She wanted to take the children and leave but had nowhere to go.


A month or two later David went abroad on an official visit and Margaret discovered that he had taken his lover with him. She managed to reach him by telephone whilst he was away but when she asked about his companion he hung up. This entire incident was so upsetting that Margaret became ill and had to take a week off work. The relationship between her and David was very strained after this and the girl-friend's marriage broke up. (Margaret had contacted the husband and told him what had happened.)


Three more tense and intermittently violent years passed, however, before a situation arose which brought things to a crisis. In mid-1983 David made another working trip and during his absence Margaret had sexual relations for the first time with a man who had become a friend during the previous year. She was at this friend's home the night David returned from his travels. She says her behaviour was deliberate: an attempt to give him a taste of his own medicine. He found her missing from the house and the children in the care of her sister and a niece of his who had come to be with the family during his absence. He drove around looking for her at relatives' and friends' houses.


The next day David went to Margaret's office to find out why she had slept away from home and where she had been. He punched her in the face and broke her glasses. Ten days later there was another violent scene between the two of them when he demanded to know, and she told him, where she had been that night. He grabbed her by the neck, punched her, threw her against the wall and smashed a coffee mug against her face. Her jaw was broken. She was off work for three months during which time she had extensive medical treatment including surgery to wire up her jaw bone.


Not long before the incident she had been promoted to a very responsible position. The confidence that her employers had shown in her and support from friends, particularly the man with whom she had stayed, had boosted her morale and had perhaps given her the spirit to oppose David in the way that provoked his attack. Now she was completely demoralised and felt totally defeated. She resigned from her job. The resignation was not accepted (though she was transferred to a position which subjected her to less pressure) and she was given full pay throughout her sick-leave - her employers went beyond the call of duty in their moral and real support for her.


On being discharged from the hospital after her jaw had been wired she went to stay at a brother's house in a different suburb from her own, but David would not let her keep even the baby with her, neither did he bring the children to visit. One day, after a week, she decided to go to her own home to see the children during the day when David would be at work. She found that there had been an accident and the baby had a damaged ear which was causing great pain. She rushed the baby to the doctor telling her sister to telephone David. He collected them from the doctor's, but although he returned Margaret to her brother's at her request, he would not let the baby stay there with her. Feeling that the welfare of the children was more important than her fear and her need to escape from tension, she went home with the family.


From then onwards David made her life generally unbearable. In addition, the assaults continued. On numerous occasions he demanded sexual relations with her. If she went to bed early, tired, he would disturb her by putting on the light, moving the fan around and generally making deliberate noises. If she did not respond to this he would grab her by the ankles and pull her off the bed. If she remonstrated with him he would beat her.


About nine months after the broken jaw incident, on an occasion when Margaret was sleeping and he came to the bedroom to wake her up, in order to avoid a fight she got up and before he realised it slipped next door to a neighbour. She asked the neighbour to drive her to a relative's house, which he did, leaving the children at home. The children were now old enough to realise and be disturbed by the aggression between their parents.


The following morning David came to collect her. She refused to go with him, so he left, but threatened to send the three children to his parents in the provinces. Margaret went to the police, and accompanied by a patrol car and one of her male cousins, she went home where they found open suitcases and the children's clothes partly packed. David was angry and told the police to stop interfering and leave.


Margaret and David talked for several hours. She told him she could no longer live with him and that she was prepared to let the court decide on the custody of the children. David promised that if she returned to him he would never hit her again. He told her that if he broke his promise she could take the youngest child and walk out. The older children were due to start the new school year two days later, so, for their sake once more, she agreed to live back at home.


Ten days later, acting on a false suspicion that Margaret had again been seeing the male friend with whom she had previously stayed, David entered the bedroom where Margaret was in bed, grabbed her by the hair and punched her face. He accused her of 'screwing around', which she denied because it was untrue. During the argument she left the house, which was built on piles, and hid underneath it to shelter from the rain. After some time David came out holding a knife which he placed on a bench. She was very frightened, but was also extremely worried that he would carry out his threat to send the children to the provinces if she left home. So in due course she crept into the house and slept in one of the children's beds.


Three days later David demanded that Margaret have sexual relations with him. She complied to avoid argument and violence. During the next month he repeatedly demanded sex and persisted in going into the bedroom to disturb her if she went to bed early feeling tired. Then one night, she went to bed at about ten o'clock, and when David came in and demanded sex she refused. He became very angry, and one of the children woke up and started crying. He grabbed Margaret's ankles and pulled her on to the floor, tore off the shorts she had on and tried to rape her. She screamed for help and the lady next door ran over. By this time all three children were awake, as they had been on many previous occasions, witnessing the violence and foul language their father used against their mother. Everyone collected in the lounge where Margaret, distraught, told him she could continue this life style no longer. She says, in retrospect, that this attempted rape was the final breaking-point of her endurance, but she did not at that time move away from home.


Three days later however, at breakfast, again acting on a false suspicion that Margaret had seen her male friend, he hit her across the face and knocked her off the chair where she was sitting. This resulted in David being charged in court with unlawful assault, to which he pleaded guilty, and he was bound over to be on good behaviour for twelve months on a recognisance of 200 kina (approximately US. $200, 1985). Unfortunately there was a gap of three months between the summons and the hearing of the case. David asked for this deferment on the grounds that he was going to be out of town through work. In fact he did not go away and used the three months to harass Margaret and to pressurise her; mainly through the children, to drop her charges. At the time of the summons Margaret went to live with relatives, where David would not allow her to keep the children overnight. One incident during this period illustrates that David's behaviour continued to be high-handed and violent.


David arrived unannounced one day to collect Margaret from work. He said he would drive her to her relatives' so that they could talk privately on the way. During the journey he changed direction and drove towards their home. She attempted to leave the car but he held the door handle and pinned her back with his elbow. He parked the car under the house, and as she made to walk off, he grabbed her and swung her round so that she slipped and fell onto concrete, cutting her head which bled profusely. She started to scream, the children ran out of the house and neighbours rang one of her brothers who in turn rang the police; in due course they all arrived at the scene. David meanwhile realised he had gone too far. He produced a knife and told Margaret to kill him, and when she refused he threatened to kill himself, if not then, later. Knowing that the court case was already pending and feeling emotionally exhausted Margaret did not press further charges.


Around the time of the court hearing, Margaret was allocated by her employer a two bedroom home which would have well housed the children, but David would never allow her to keep the two older ones overnight. During the next year he constantly used the children as an excuse to further harass and abuse Margaret and make her life difficult. Unfortunately the way responsibility for the children was divided brought them into frequent contact in circumstances where it was necessary to liaise.


Within a few days of his conviction for assault David came to her house and rampaged in such a frightening manner that Margaret went to relatives, with whom she remained for ten days, until a brother arrived from the provinces to stay with her, for protection, in her own house. Roughly three months later, when she was taking the children to church, he found her about to enter the church, admonished her publicly and abusively for not leaving a message so that he would know where she had gone, snatched the baby off her hip and took off with the three children. On another occasion he came to the house in the early hours of the morning, woke the household and the neighbourhood whilst trying to get someone to unlock the garden gate, and then took the youngest child who had been sleeping there. Many times he waited outside her office with the children and forced himself on her, insisting on taking her home. He harassed her with countless phone calls to her office and with unexpected, persistent calls at the house. He ate most of his evening meals at her house, there to take the two older children to his place to sleep; then he often made social calls at other people's houses on the way, so the children would be very late to bed.


There were incidents too numerous to list, but one of them has an ironic twist. After a Saturday night which had been particularly badly disturbed by David, on his arrival at her house the next day in an eminently arrogant and offensive manner, Margaret's chaperoning brother, obviously tried to his limit, swung a metal bar at David's car and smashed the windscreen. The result of this was that David charged Margaret's brother with assault! And Margaret reported David for breaking his good behaviour bond. Now, at the time of writing three months later, court cases are awaited on that assault and an official plea by Margaret to be given legal custody of the children. It is worth noting that according to the custom followed by Margaret's people, as David has not paid her bride-price, she would be entitled to keep the children.


Discussion


In trying to analyse the basis of violence in the marriages of Rose and Margaret, first the differences between the two cases and then the similarities will be discussed. A difference which occurs in any such comparison and which was not fully manifest in the cases above lies in the personalities of the actors. For the purpose of this discussion the significance of personality differences, because of how they affect behaviour, applies not to the women but to the men. Today both women are seen by their friends as somewhat shy, not normally outspoken, and Margaret is certainly described as quiet, even timid, but they are both warm, open and giving with people they know and like. Margaret has a thin build and is naturally more tense than Rose who is rotund and calm. The women, particularly Margaret, say that they were very submissive at the beginning of their respective relationships and conformed to the expected role of subordinate wife. It was only after continuous and unfair subordination that both women changed and began to face up to their husbands. But their opposition incited the men t o exert more control and a vicious circle developed. Neither woman ever initiated physical violence (there are other cases where women do take this role) but Rose has hit back, partly in self-defence and partly in sheer retaliation, on occasions when '...he has caused me too much pain'. Both women became emotionally involved with their partners in the early days, were 'in love', and by the time they had a child felt a degree of commitment to the relationships. Although there were early signs of violence both women thought that things would improve, or at least not deteriorate, and they accepted the bad in their husbands with the good.


The men on the other hand appear to have been less tolerant of their partners. Both men are popular among their associates and are seen as pleasant, friendly, easy-going, and neither is habitually violent outside the home - David has sometimes shown aggression on the sports-field and John on rare occasions has hit an uncle and a brother. There is a marked difference though in the way the women describe their personal behaviour. Rose says that John's peer group, or, in general, any male friends with whom he socialises, have a strong influence on the fact that he spends so little time at home. Consequently, he gives her virtually no support on the domestic scene and this has become part of their problem - when he complains about her failure to meet with his domestic expectations, however unreasonably, she answers back accusing him of neglect and he sees this as provocative. David however is more of an individualist. Margaret feels that his period in an Australian high school made him arrogant and alienated him from his peers to some extent. She does not think that immediate outside social pressures have directly influenced his behaviour towards her. In fact she feels that, had he been susceptible to outside pressure, some relatives or friends may have been able to exert a good influence on him during bad times.


Relationships outside the nuclear family, with extended families and other women, illustrate two further differences between the couples. Whereas John has dallied with other women, Rose has not felt particularly threatened by it. She has objected but does not see it as a major obstacle in her life. David however has maintained a strong relationship throughout with one other women who has had, it is believed, two children by him. This relationship has caused Margaret a great deal of anguish and it was her initial discovery of it that caused her to plan to leave David when her first child was only three months old. The question she has asked, and which is perhaps central to this discussion and an understanding of the problem is: why won't he let her go? Instead of joining his other woman, he chooses to maintain a violent and unhappy relationship with Margaret, who has begged him to release her. It is difficult to know the extent to which his mistress has tried to influence a decision, but it is likely that both women want the same outcome.


Apart from this pressure, against David, there has been support, for Margaret, from her family. There are certainly cases of violence against women from their own families. This may happen when a woman is believed to be in the wrong or when a family is trying to pressurise a woman into complying with their wishes regarding her marriage - an illustration of the way some families view women's subordinate position. Neither Rose nor Margaret have had this problem, but Rose has not benefited either from family support. She has no extended family members in Port Moresby and has been pressured from a distance by her family, afraid of magic, not to antagonise John too much. (This attitude towards magic is less to do with levels of sophistication than the belief in the strength of traditional magical powers in a particular ethnic area). In addition she has received openly hostile treatment from John's family through personal abuse and gossip to John about her. They certainly believe Rose should bear her burden more quietly.


Margaret's family however have given her considerable support: moral, financial and physical. She is most thankful and says her situation would have been even worse without them. And David's family has not opposed her; they have kept out of the affair which in the circumstances and in view of David's status and individualism is to be expected. Yet despite this benign attitude from David's family and support from her own, Margaret was not able to end her relationship with David.


Another difference between the couples relates to status and education. Rose and John both have rural backgrounds, they both went to community based primary schools, both attended high school as boarders though did not excel, and can now be said to be average white-collar urban dwellers. Margaret basically grew up away from the fully traditional environment and David, after a rural beginning, was put into a totally Western environment. They are both university graduates who now hold prestigious jobs and belong to the top socio-economic stratum. It is worth noting here that although both partners of each couple are not from the same ethnic group, they are from the same province, and traditional cultural differences that exist are not considered to be significant in the context of this discussion.


The role of alcohol in the violence of the relationships is a further difference. Neither woman drinks alcohol, which is typical of Papua New Guinea women but both men do. Rose asserts that alcohol is the main trigger of violence between herself and John but Margaret insists that it is not in their case. There have been times when David has been drunk and hit her but he does not always hit her when drunk and usually hits her when sober. Abuse of alcohol is commonly held to be a major cause of domestic violence in Papua New Guinea so it is interesting to note that in the urban survey into domestic violence conducted by the Law Reform Commission, although 71% of the female respondents opined that alcohol is the major cause of problems in marriage, only 26% of those urban women who said they had been hit (56% of the total sample) said that the violence was due to alcohol (Toft ed., 1985).


Now to look at the similarities in the pattern of the couples' relationships. To start at the beginning, both women met the men soon after leaving school, when Rose was sixteen and Margaret nineteen years old, and although Rose did not proceed to university, both are educated above the standard of the majority of urban women. The men, educated to the same level as their partners had both been out in the world longer.


Soon after meeting, both couples became sexually involved and, although Rose did not become pregnant as quickly as Margaret, de facto marriages were established because of pregnancies. This seems to be common today in urban Papua New Guinea, particularly among women who are, so to speak, independent migrants, be it as students or members of the work-force. Many live in hostel accommodation and although they may have a relative or two in town they are virtually on their own. A man and woman strike up a relationship, later establish themselves as a couple and without going through any formalities, whether traditional or modern, describe themselves as married. In such a situation the couple are to a degree committed to each other and may be planning to marry eventually. The problem that these informal arrangements between couples raise for women regarding marital violence is that their families are not in a position to assert control on the husband in a way that would have been possible according to tradition.


In traditional Papua New Guinea, marriage was not a contract between two individual men and women, but between two kin groups. The extent to which rights over the woman were transferred from her own family to her husband's depended on the customs of a particular ethnic group, but in virtually all societies a woman could claim and expect support from her own family if she was strongly abused by her husband who would then have to atone for his behaviour. In the Law Reform Commission Rural Survey approximately three-quarters of both the men and women said that a beaten wife could expect help, and over three-quarters of those respondents said the help would come from relatives, the most likely ones being those of the wife (Toft and Bonnell, 1985). In a specific urban case; a beaten wife sought refuge with an aunt. Her husband, although not from the same ethnic group, observed the traditions of his wife's people and went to apologise for his behaviour to the aunt and another family member before asking the wife to return home. Unfortunately, for many urban dwellers this type of behaviour is simply not possible either because the family is not there, as in Rose's case, or because tradition has already died. Although Margaret has had support from her family, it has not been in a traditional way, so David has not been obliged to submit to traditional checks on his violence. Margaret, her siblings and David, because their upbringing and education was not traditionally oriented, do not follow custom in this respect and older family members, if available, are too intimidated by their education and status to interfere. Further, if an extended family has not played a part in the upbringing of a woman, through care and contributions to welfare and education, that is to say has not made an investment or stake in her, its members do not often feel they can rightly challenge her husband. So alienation from the village and family authority is from both directions. Many women in urban areas are thus isolated from customary controls in the case of assaults from husbands, and not many of them have the ability, determination and courage to seek the alternative form of control through the courts.


Many de facto marriages are initiated by unplanned pregnancies. It is not difficult to obtain free contraceptives but few single women seem to use them. One possible reason for this is religious conscience. The vast majority of educated Papua New Guineans have been influenced by religious dogma, regardless of sect, which forbids pre-marital sex. When people indulge in pre-marital sex it is initially private and a matter of personal conscience. To seek contraceptives is to take a big psychological step in admitting openly, both to one self and the medical agent, that a wrong is being committed, and in some cases, for instance Catholics, that a further premeditated sin will occur. Many traditional values also hold that pre-marital sex is taboo, and other strict, inhibiting, traditional rules apply to sexual behaviour.


Further, whilst contraceptives are available on demand at chemists, it is at a price, and a customer has to know precisely what to ask for. The way to obtain free contraceptives is to go to a clinic where anonymity is lost, in the waiting room and in the filing system, so the whole public procedure is very inhibiting to most single women. No doubt another reason contributing towards the lack of contraceptive use is a cultural tendency to be casual in planning, even if the initial hurdle of conscience has been crossed. And some women just dislike the idea of pills or Depoprovera injections.


To return to Rose and Margaret, they were both involved in de facto marriages, so did not have to worry about divorce in order to break away from their respective husbands, although John had at a late stage paid bride-price for Rose; both of them had actually left their husbands successfully when their first children were only a few months old. When a traditional marriage has taken place there are usually constraints against divorce often involving the return of brideprice, which the woman's family would be loath to do, but this was never the case with either Rose or Margaret (Rose's father having banked the payment). Brideprice is generally not returnable in full if the man is in the wrong or if children remain with him.


This brings us to another issue involving both couples - custody and care of the children. Both women have been financially independent (Margaret at a later stage than Rose, but earlier she had access to financial help from her brothers) and have to a great extent been supporting themselves and their children. Neither woman feels that money has been a central issue; even though the men have complained about expenses, the women have been contributing the lion's share to child maintenance. Accommodation, indirectly associated with money through rent, has been a problem, especially for Rose, but rents in Port Moresby are so high that few individuals think in terms of leasing homes. Employers are expected, though are not always obliged, as in Rose's case, to provide housing. A husband is automatically nominated as the head of a household and he is allocated housing for the family. It is almost impossible for a 'married' woman to claim housing rights.


Rather than finance the issue surrounding the children has been possession. A prime concern of the women has been the children's welfare, which is their acknowledged responsibility, and Margaret particularly was trapped by this, returning to David more than once because of it. John more than David is an absentee father, but one of the reasons Margaret continues to cook evening meals for David is because then she knows that the children are being properly fed; on leaving Margaret's house to take the older children home to sleep David often makes social calls at friend's houses and does not let the children's presence or bed-time deter him. Both men lead the independent social life of many Papua New Guinea men and spend time with their families according to whim rather than a sense of responsibility. They would find it extremely irksome, at least, to be sole guardian of their children. In fact, they would bring to the rescue a female relative, whom they would naturally have to support without the help of Rose or Margaret's salary. They would do this rather than let the children stay with their mothers. But there is another point to this. Both men, but particularly David, have used the children to manipulate the women into staying with them. It is clear that both men have tried to prolong the marriages and have in addition to the children, used violence to intimidate the women into staying. It is also clear from both cases that an increase in opposition from the women led to an increase in violence from the men: especially when the women turned to outside authority, the police and the courts, the men reacted violently.


The other factor which has provoked extreme violence is sexual jealousy. Both men have double standards in this respect and their suspicions are unfounded (except in Margaret's one instance). This can also be interpreted as possessive behaviour. When the men are at work or socialising their wives have no idea what they are up to. The husbands on the other hand keep a check on their wives with phone calls to the office and, in David's case because he has a car, unexpected visits to the office, spot-checks; and out of office hours both women are supposed to be involved in domestic affairs at home, or to inform their husbands when and why they plan to go out.


Regarding these double standards, Margaret says she feels that David is in effect practising polygamy. So whilst it is alright for him to have more than one woman, as custom would permit and encourage in a big-man, which he is, she must remain exclusively at the side of only one man. Maybe the men's false suspicions are stimulated by the fact that they know the women are unhappy and therefore wonder if their wives are susceptible to other men; this is assuming that both men are aware of their wives' unhappiness and are affected by it.


It would seem then that four factors have provoked violence. Both men, David more so, have complained that the women have failed to fulfil their marital obligations. This means that the women are not living up to the expectations that the men have in them as wives, however unreasonable those expectations are. In the case of David and John these expectations include accomplishment in domestic chores, being willing sexual partners and being compliant with a husband's wishes or demands. They want complete submission, and although they have married educated women capable of earning a considerable portion of the household income which they welcome, they do not treat their wives as equals but as subordinates.


The second provocative factor, which was the direct cause of Margaret's broken jaw and is in fact the main trigger for John's anger, is sexual jealousy. Jealousy seems to be an accepted, justifiable emotion and genuine cause for grievance in Papua New Guinea, whether relating to sexual suspicion or envy of success in others. Traditionally, a jealous person was one who could be expected to attack the object of his or her feelings through magic. So in the past it was, and is still today, considered inadvisable to arouse jealous feelings in a person. Jealousy relates to sex through the possessiveness which a person may feel for a sexual or marital partner. So both John and David have reacted violently to the fact that they suspect they may not have full control over their wives' relationships within the social world, especially with other men. They do not want their wives to be socially oriented, and treat them as if they have no right to any independence.


A third factor which causes violence is opposition by the women to the men, especially when this is externalised. This is perhaps the most obvious example of how any attempt to undermine or sever the man's control over the woman drew violence. Instead of realising that violence was not achieving the desired results the men continued with renewed efforts to try to beat the women into submission. That women are traditionally seen as subordinate to men is illustrated in many ways, from the small village boys in many Papua New Guinea societies who are not expected to respect the wishes of or accept discipline from women as they must from men, to the fact that women who lack support from male relatives are of low esteem and are usually called rabis meri (rubbish woman). Women are not viable as individuals, only in the context of their relationship to men, whether husband or male relatives.


The fourth provocateur, alcohol, applies only to John. Whether John's violence has been alcohol-related due to the fact that it releases his inhibitions, that it makes him bad tempered or that it has other effects on him is not really relevant here. Suffice it to say that in his case it triggers and aids angry assaults upon his wife.


From the cases of Rose and Margaret therefore it appears that wife-beating has been an attempt by the husband to completely dominate the wife. It has not meant that the man wanted to end the union, he just wanted complete submission. He has maintained an interest in his wife and views her as a possession over which he holds control. (Although there are also some cases of wife-beating where the man has tried to impose his will to the reverse effect: to force the wife to leave the marriage.) Whether the violent attacks are provoked by the wife's failure to come up to scratch in a specific situation, by the husband's jealous illusions or by her opposition to him, the issue has been male dominance and control. Violence has occurred when this has been threatened.


David and John chose to become involved with women who have, through their education and experience, developed the independence necessary to fulfil their various modern roles, but both men failed to anticipate that an intelligent, educated woman who is assertive and viable in the modern urban environment, is also likely to have a mind of her own at home. The weapon of modern independence is usually double-edged, like a sword, not blunt on one side like a kitchen knife.


As noted in the introduction to this article, the two cases are atypical in that the women looked beyond the family for help by going into the public arena. In other words they opposed their husbands in an extreme way and demonstrated publicly their husband's lack of control. They attacked the male ego and in return were inflicted with extreme violence. Can it be expected then, that as more women change their concept of female status through modern socialisation, and object to being hit by their husbands (as Law Reform Commission surveys have indicated is already happening: see Ranck and Toft, this volume) and therefore oppose their husbands, that violence will increase both in extent and degree? There are many Papua New Guinea men today who do not hit their wives, and it can be assumed that some other men's attitudes will mellow, just as women's ideas are changing, through modern socialisation. Meanwhile it seems probable that some of the women who have the spirit t o oppose their husbands will be subjected to considerable degrees of violence from which their families will not be in a position to protect them.


In rural areas traditional machinery is still well oiled and runs reasonably smoothly, but in urban areas today the machinery lacks lubrication and use. Urban women have little recourse to customary jurisdiction and state jurisdiction is usually out of reach or little understood. So the state needs to facilitate the handling of the criminal offence of assault where women are concerned. The present consensus of national public opinion adheres to the concept that women are mere possessions of men, by treating a husband's assault on a wife as a private matter. This is against the constitutional rights of women which need to be protected. Officers placed in the Public Solicitor's Office to deal exclusively, with women's cases would be an effective beginning in helping women who are suffering physical violence from their husbands.


References


TOFT, S. and BONNELL, S. (1985). 'Marriage and Domestic Violence in Rural Papua New Guinea', Occasional Paper No.18, Law Reform Commission of Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby.


APPENDIX I


COPY OF THE LETTER FROM THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF WOMEN
to the Chairman of the Law Reform Commission in which they requested action.


Dear Sir,


At an Extraordinary General Meeting on November 28th-29th 1981, the National Council of Women unanimously passed a resolution to request the Law Reform Commission and the National Government to give urgent consideration to the sections of the law of Papua New Guinea which particularly concern women. The National Council of Women feels strongly that the law currently gives inadequate protection in the following cases:


1. Violence against women, especially by men against their wives and girlfriends.

2. Rape.

3. Women (whether married or unmarried) who have been deserted by the fathers of their children.


The Constitution of our country bans inhuman treatment, but the law gives little help to women who are violently assaulted or raped, or to deserted women who have to carry the sole responsibility for bringing up children alone, because the laws on maintenance are inadequate and little effort is made to enforce them.


At every National Convention of Women since 1975 the National Council has passed resolutions asking for an urgent review of the law in these areas, but we have not seen any change so far. We therefore urge you in the strongest terms to recognise our great need, and make 1982 the year in which the law at least extends to women our basic human rights.


We ask that the Law Reform Commission begin an immediate investigation into the above mentioned fields of law (in the order of priority as listed) and that women from all walks of life should themselves be consulted at every stage.


As the major organisation representing women in this country, we feel that the National Council of Women should be represented on all committees and decision making bodies to be set up to deal with these issues. Where Provincial Governments are considering Family Laws for their Provinces it is imperative that they also involve their Provincial Councils of Women, since Provincial Governments are still virtually all male, and do not know women's views.


We look forward to your early response.


Yours faithfully
Mrs Erna Pita, President.


cc The Prime Minister, Sir Julius Chan
The Minister for Community and Family Services, Mr Zibang Zurenuoc
The Secretary for Community and Family Services, Ms Rose Kekedo
The Minister for Justice, Mr John Yaka


APPENDIX 2


VILLAGE QUESTIONNAIRE ON MARRIAGE


Village Name: Respondent's Sex: MALE FEMALE
Age: YOUNG MATURE OLD


I have some questions I would like to ask you about married life. Because some of these questions are very personal I am not writing your name on this paper. It may go against your custom to talk abut some of these things with me. I do not want to go against your custom. If you feel strongly that you cannot talk about these things with me, please tell me and I will go to the next question.
(Interviewer: please remember to mark in the left margin when necessary: NR – no response, T- tambu, DK – don’t know)


I. Marital Status
SINGLE MARRIED DIVORCED WIDOW(ER)


2. How many husbands/wives have you been married to?
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


3. How many wives do you have now? (For men only)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


4. How were you married?


Number:
type
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
Custom








Church








General law









5. What do you think causes problems in marriage?


Lack of respect Adultery
Relatives Husband taking new wife
Incest Wife refusing to cook
Husband hitting wife Wife refusing to do other work
Bride-price Gambling
Problems with children Other (specify)


6. If you have marriage problems - (a) do you usually discuss this with anyone?
YES NO SOMETIMES
(b) If so, who?


7. What causes divorce in your society?


8. (a) Do more people get divorced now than in the past?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, why do you think this is happening?


9. (a) Have you ever been divorced?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, how many times?
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10


(c) If Yes, why did you divorce?


10. (a) Is it alright for a husband to hit his wife with his hands?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


11. (a) Is it alright for a husband t o hit his wife with a stick or other weapon?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


(c) Specify weapon


12. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband with her hands?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances.


13. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband with a stick or weapon?
Y ES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


(c) Specify weapon.


14. (a) If a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, who would help?
(c) If Yes, why would they help?


15. How many husbands hit their wives in this village?


NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS


16. How many wives hit their husbands in this village?


NONE SOME MANY ALL WIVES


17. (a) Do husbands hit their wives more often today than they used to?
YES NO DON'T KNOW


(b) If Yes, why do you think this is happening?


18. If your husband/ wife were to hit you, what would you do?


19. (a) Have you ever hit your husband /wife?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, how often?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(c) With what did you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE OTHER:


(d) Where on their body did you hit?


(e) Why did you hit?


20. (a) Has your husband/wife ever hit you?
YES NO


(b) If Yes how often?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(c) With what did they hit you?
HAND STICK KNIFE OTHER:


(d) Where on the body were you hit?


(e) Why did they hit you?


21. Is it alright for a married man to have sexual intercourse with:


(a) Single woman - YES NO
(b) Married woman - YES NO
(c) Prostitute - YES NO
(d) Another man - YES NO


22. Is it alright for a married woman to have sexual intercourse with:


(a) A single man - YES NO
(b) A married man - YES NO
(c) A woman - YES NO


23. (a) What does a wife do or say if she wants to shame or insult her husband?
(b) What happens if she does?


24. (a) What does a husband do or say if he wants to shame or insult his wife?
(b) What happens if he does this?


25. What could help to make marriage better in your place?


APPENDIX 3
URBAN QUESTIONNAIRE ON MARRIAGE PROBLEMS (MAN)


Name of interviewer: .............................................................................................
Number of Interviewer: ..........................................................................................
Number of Questionnaire: .......................................................................................
Place of Interview: ................................................................................................


INTERVIEWERS' INSTRUCTIONS


- Please put your name on the questionnaire papers you complete, in case we need to check details with you later.


- Please remember:


1. not to suggest answers to your respondent unless instructed: and
2. always check whether the respondent has something to add in the ‘other’ category.


- In marking responses:
1. Where there are no boxes but words circle the correct word
2. Where there are boxes
Place an X in the appropriate box or boxes.
REMEMBER there may be more than one response to many of these questions.
3. Where there are spaces, write the answers plase write clearly, m i t e the annwetn


- Please try to be very accurate if you translate the questions into Pidgin or Motu.


I have some questions I would like to ask about married life. Because some of these questions are very personal I am not writing your name on this paper.


Respondent's Sex: MALE FEMALE
Respondent's Age: YOUNG(under 30 yrs) MATURE(31-45 yrs) OLD(over 45 yrs)
Are you: MARRIED LIVING TOGETHER DIVORCED WIDOWER SINGLE
What neighbourhood do you live in? .......................................................................
Which Province were you born in? .........................................................................
Which Province was your wife born in? ..................................................................
Is your wife from your language group? YES NO
Does your wife have a paid job? YES NO


1. What do you think causes problems in marriage?


DISLIKE OF PARTNER SEXUAL JEALOUSY
RELATIVES/WANTOKS MONEY PROBLEMS
ALCOHOL MIXED MARRIAGE
HUSBAND HITTING WIFE GAMBLING
BRIDE-PRICE WIFE NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS
PROBLEMS WITH CHILDREN HUSBAND NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS


2. If you have marriage problems
(a) Do you discuss this with anyone? YES NO
(b) If Yes, are they from:


CHURCH WELFARE
LIFELINE YOUR RELATIVES
WANTOK GROUP YOUR FRIENDS
VILLAGE COURT POLICE
OTHER:


3. How many husbands hit their wives in your neighbourhood or among your friends?


(a) NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS
NOGAT SAMPELA PLANTI OLGETA


(b) Does a next door neighbour at home hit his wife? YES NO


4. (a) Is it alright for a husband to hit his wife? YES NO


(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a husband to hit his wife?

WHEN SHE FAILS TO MEET HER OBLIGATIONS

WHEN HE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN HE IS DEFENDING HIMSELF

WHEN HE 15 DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

WHEN HER JOB INTERFERES WITH HOME LIFE

ANY TIME, A HUSBAND HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HIS WIFE

OTHER


5. (a) When a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?


ALWAYS SOMETIMES NEVER


(b) If Yes, who would help her?

HOUSEHOLD MEMBER

RELATIVE/WANTOK

NEIGHBOUR/FRIEND

POLICE

STRANGERS

OTHER


6. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband? YES NO


(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?

WHEN HER HUSBAND FAILS TO MEET HIS OBLIGATIONS

WHEN SHE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN SHE IS DEFENDING HERSELF

WHEN SHE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

OTHER:


7. (a) Do you ever hit your wife? YES NO


(b) If Yes, why do you hit?

WHEN SHE DOES NOT FULFIL HER OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HER BEHAVIOUR MAKES ME JEALOUS

HUSBAND HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HIS WIFE

WHEN I'M DRUNK

TO DEFEND MYSELF WHEN SHE HITS ME

BECAUSE OF A DOMESTIC ARGUMENT

OTHER


(c) If Yes, how often do you hit her?


EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH ONCE A YEAR
MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(d) With what have you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


8. (a) Has your wife hit you? YES NO


(b) If Yes, why did she hit you?

BECAUSE SHE SAID I WAS NOT FULFILLING MY OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE SHE WAS JEALOUS

SHE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT ME

SHE WAS DEFENDING HERSELF WHEN, I HIT HER

BECAUSE SHE WAS DRUNK

BECAUSE WE HAD A DOMESTIC ARGUMENT

OTHER:


(c) If Yes, how often does she hit you?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH ONCE A YEAR
MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR,


(d) With what has she hit you?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


(e) When she has hit you, have you ever -

either told the police? YES NO

or had to go to the hospital? YES NO


9. In your opinion, what could help to make marriages better?


APPENDIX 4
URBAN QUESTIONNAIRE ON MARRIAGE PROBLEMS (WOMAN)


Name of Interviewer: .............................................................................................
Number of interviewer: ..........................................................................................
Number of Questionnaire: .......................................................................................
Place of Interview: ................................................................................................


INTERVIEWERS' INSTRUCTIONS


- Please put your name on the questionnaire papers you complete, in case we need
to check details with you later.
- Please remember:
1. not to suggest answers to your respondent unless instructed; and
2. always check whether the respondent has something to add in the "other" category .


- In making responses:
I . When there are no boxes but words, circle the correct word
2 . Where there are boxes, place an ‘X’ in the appropriate box


REMEMBER there may be more than one response to many of these questions.


3. Where there are spaces write the answer


- Please try to be very accurate if you translate the questions into Pidgin or Motu.


I have some questions I would like to ask about married life. Because some of these questions are very personal I am not writing your name on this paper.


Respondent's Sex: MALE FEMALE
Respondent's Age: YOUNG(under 30 yrs) MATURE(31-45 yrs) OLD(over 45 yrs)
Are you: MARRIED LIVING TOGETHER
DIVORCED WIDOW SINGLE


What neighbourhood do you live in? .......................................................................
Which Province were you born in? .........................................................................
Which Province was your husband born in? .............................................................
Is your husband from your language group? YES NO
Does your husband have a paid job? YES NO


l. What do you think causes problems in marriage?

DISLIKE OF PARTNER SEXUAL JEALOUSY

RELATIVES/WANTOKS MONEY PROBLEMS

ALCOHOL MIXED MARRIAGE

HUSBAND HITTING WIFE GAMBLING

BRIDE-PRICE WIFE NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS

PROBLEMS WITH CHILDREN HUSBAND NOT MEET OBLIGATIONS


2. If you have marriage problems
(a) Do you discuss this with anyone? YES NO
(b) If Yes, are they from:

CHURCH WELFARE

LIFELINE YOUR RELATIVES

WANTOK GROUP YOUR FRIENDS

VILLAGE COURT POLICE


3. How many husbands hit their wives in your neighbourhood or among your
friends?


(a) NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS
NOGAT SAMPELA PLANTI OLGETA


(b) Does a next door neighbour at home hit his wife? YES NO


4. (a) Is it alright for a husband to hit his wife? YES NO
(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a husband t o hit his wife?

WHEN SHE FAILS T0 MEET OBLIGATIONS

WHEN HE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN HE IS DEFENDING HIMSELF

WHEN HE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

HER JOB 1NTERFERES WITH HOME LIFE


5. (a) When a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?
ALWAYS SOMETIMES NEVER
(b) If Yes, who would help her?

HOUSEHOLD MEMBER

RELATIVEIWANTOK

NEIGHBOURIFRIEND

POLICE

STRANGERS


6. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband? YES NO


(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?

WHEN HER HUSBAND FAILS TO MEET HIS OBLIGATIONS

WHEN SHE 1s SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN SHE IS DEFENDING HERSELF

WHEN SHE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS


7. (a) Do you ever hit your husband? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why do you hit?

IF HE DOES NOT FULFIL HIS OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HIS BEHAVIOUR MAKES ME JEALOUS

WIFE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HER HUSBAND

WHEN I'M DRUNK

TO DEFEND MYSELF WHEN HE HITS ME

BECAUSE OF A DOMESTIC ARGUMENT


(c) If Yes, how often do you hit him?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(d) With what have you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE BELT CHAIN OTHER:


8. (a) Has your husband ever hit you? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why did he hit you?

BECAUSE HE SAID I WAS NOT FULFILLING MY OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HE WAS JEALOUS

HE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT ME

HE WAS DEFENDING HIMSELF WHEN I HIT HIM

BECAUSE HE WAS DRUNK

BECAUSE WE HAD A DOMESTIC ARGUMENT

OTHER:


(c) If Yes, how often does he hit you?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR6


(d) With what has he hit you?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS
STONE BELT CHAIN OTHER:


(e) When he has hit you, have you ever -
either told the police? YES NO
or had to go to the hospital? YES NO


9. In your opinion, what could help to make marriages better?


APPENDIX 5
QUESTIONNAIRE FOR SENIOR PUBLIC SERVANTS AND THEIR SPOUSES


The Public Services Commission has lent its support for a survey being conducted by the Law Reform Commission and has authorised the distribution of questionnaires (Ref: PSC Circular Memorandum No. 16184, 28 December 1984).


Enclosed you will find two copies of a questionnaire: one is marked HUSBAND in the top right-hand corner, the other is marked WIFE. We hope that after reading the first page of the questionnaire you will be able and willing to complete the appropriate one and take the other one home for your spouse to complete.


We very much hope that your spouse will help this survey, but if she or he is unwilling or unable (perhaps because of absence) to fill in the appropriate questionnaire, we would still like to receive your own completed form.


Also enclosed are two envelopes which are for the return of the two completed questionnaires through the inter-departmental mail system. Because your forms will not carry your name or department and will come back to us in these sealed envelopes they will be completely anonymous. We would appreciate replies as soon as possible but at least by the end of March.


QUESTIONNAIRE (HUSBAND)


The Law Reform Commission is investigating the social problem of domestic violence.


Many people agree that this is a problem because it spoils family life and causes disruptions which threaten family stability. As the family is the core of our society and of our own individual lives marital conflicts have serious effects.


However until the real causes of fights between husbands and wives are known it will be impossible to find an approach to help alleviate the problem. The purpose of this questionnaire therefore is to try to discover the causes and extent of marital disputes.


Some questions are general, and we would like your general opinion on problems not necessarily experienced by you and your spouse but by other couples. Other questions are personal and we very much hope you will answer frankly because the questionnaire is completely anonymous.


In marking responses, please:


1. Where there are no boxes but words, circle the correct answer.
2. Where there are boxes, place an X in the appropriate box or boxes.


REMEMBER there may be more than one response to many of these questions so use as many boxes as you need; and


REMEMBER to use the OTHER category where necessary.


3. Where there are spaces, write the answer (please write clearly)


PLEASE READ CAREFULLY


There are two terms which need prior explanation:


1. 'failure to meet obligations' - is when a spouse is not meeting the expectations
of his or her partner regarding family responsibilities (traditional or modern). However innocent you feel, if your spouse accuses you of not helping enough in certain matters, that is a cause of a problem;


2. 'sexual jealousy' - distinguishes jealousy in marriage from other forms of jealousy, for instance jealousy of another person's wealth. The term includes adultery, but also general suspicions about a spouse's relations with the opposite sex and activities outside the home.


Are you: MARRIED LIVING TOGETHER DIVORCED WIDOWER SINGLE
Are you: under 30 yrs 31-45 yrs over 45 yrs
Which Province are you from?:


Is your wife from your language group?: YES NO
Does your wife have a paid job?: YES NO


1. (a) What do you think causes problems in marriages?
PLEASE IDENTIFY AT LEAST THREE MAJOR CAUSES
DISLIKE OF PARTNER SEXUAL JEALOUSY
RELATIVES/WANTOKS MONEY PROBLEMS
ALCOHOL MIXED MARRIAGE
HUSBAND HITTING WIFE GAMBLING
BRIDE-PRICE WIFE NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS
PROBLEMS WITH CHILDREN HUSBAND NOT MEET OBLIGATIONS
OTHER:


(b) If you have marked NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS please indicate what type of obligations and what they relate to:



WIFE
HUSBAND
Type: related to:
CASH
TIME
CASH
TIME
GENERAL TRADITIONAL DEMANDS




WELFARE OF NUCLEAR FAMILY




MODERN URBAN DEMANDS





2. If you have marriage problems

(a) Do you discuss this with anyone? YES NO

(b) If Yes, are they from:

CHURCH WELFARE

LIFELINE YOUR RELATIVES

WANTOK GROUP YOUR FRIENDS

VILLAGE COURT POLICE

OTHER


3. How many husbands hit their wives in your neighbourhood or among your friends?
(a) NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS


(b) Does a next door neighbour at home hit his wife? YES NO
4. (a) In your opinion, is it alright for a husband to hit his wife?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a husband to hit his wife?

WHEN SHE FAILS TO MEET HER OBLIGATIONS

WHEN HE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN HE IS DEFENDING HIMSELF

WHEN HE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

WHEN HER JOB INTERFERES WITH HOME LIFE

ANY TIME, A HUSBAND HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HIS WIFE

OTHER


5. (a) When a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?
ALWAYS SOMETIMES NEVER


(b) If Yes, who would help her?

HOUSEHOLD MEMBER

RELATIVE/WANTOK

NEIGHBOUR/FRIEND

POLICE

STRANGERS


6. (a) In your opinion, is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?

WHEN HER HUSBAND FAILS TO MEET HIS OBLIGATIONS

WHEN SHE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN SHE 15 DEFENDING HERSELF

WHEN SHE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

ANY TIME A WIFE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HER HUSBAND

OTHER


7. (a) Do you ever hit your wife? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why do you hit?

WHEN SHE DOES NOT FULFIL HER OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HER BEHAVIOUR MAKES ME JEALOUS

HUSBAND HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HIS WIFE

WHEN I'M DRUNK

TO DEFEND MYSELF WHEN SHE HITS ME

BECAUSE OF MONEY PROBLEMS

OTHER


(c) If Yes, how often do you hit her?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(d) With what have you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


8. (a) Has your wife ever hit you? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why did she hit you?

BECAUSE SHE SAID I WAS NOT FULFILLING MY OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE SHE WAS JEALOUS

SHE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT ME

SHE WAS DEFENDING HERSELF WHEN I HIT HER

BECAUSE SHE WAS DRUNK .

BECAUSE OF MONEY PROBLEMS

OTHER
(c) If Yes, how often does she hit you?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(d) With what has she hit you?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


(e) When she has hit you, have you ever -

either told the police? YES NO

or had to go to the hospital? YES NO


9. In your opinion, what could help to make marriages better?


APPENDIX 6
QUESTIONNAIRE FOR SENIOR PUBLIC SERVANTS AND THEIR SPOUSES


The Public Services Commission has lent its support for a survey being conducted by the Law Reform Commission and has authorised the distribution of questionnaires (Ref: PSC Circular Memorandum No. 16184, 28 December 1984).


Enclosed you will find two copies of a questionnaire: one is marked HUSBAND in the top right-hand corner, the other is marked WIFE. We hope that after reading the first page of the questionnaire you will be able and willing to complete the appropriate one and take the other one home for your spouse to complete.


We very much hope that your spouse will help this survey, but if she or he is unwilling or unable (perhaps because of absence) to fill in the appropriate questionnaire, we would still like to receive your own completed form.


Also enclosed are two envelopes which are for the return of the two completed questionnaires through the inter-departmental mail system. Because your forms will nor carry your name or department and will come back to us in these sealed envelopes they will be completely anonymous. We would appreciate replies as soon as possible but at least by the end of March.


QUESTIONNAIRE (WIFE)


The Law Reform Commission is investigating the social problem of domestic violence.


Many people agree that this is a problem because it spoils family life and causes disruptions which threaten family stability. As the family is the core of our society and of our own individual lives marital conflicts have serious effects.


However until the real causes of fights between husbands and wives are known it will be impossible to find an approach to help alleviate the problem. The purpose of this questionnaire therefore is to try to discover the causes and extent of marital disputes.


Some questions are general, and we would like your general opinion on problems not necessarily experienced by you and' your spouse but by other couples. Other questions are personal and we very much hope you will answer frankly because the questionnaire is completely anonymous.


In marking responses, please:


1. Where there are no boxes but words, circle the correct answer.
2. Where there are boxes, place an X in the appropriate box or boxes.


REMEMBER there may be more than one response to many of these questions so use as many boxes as you need; and REMEMBER to use the OTHER category where necessary.


3. Where there are spaces, write the answer (please write clearly)


PLEASE READ CAREFULLY


There are two terms which need prior explanation:


1. 'failure to meet obligations' - is when a spouse is not meeting the expectations of his or her partner regarding family responsibilities (traditional or modern). However innocent you feel, if your spouse accuses you of not helping enough in certain matters, that is a cause of a problem;


2. 'sexual jealousy' - distinguishes jealousy in marriage from other forms of jealousy, for instance jealousy of another person's wealth. The term includes adultery, but also general suspicions about a spouse's relations with the opposite sex and activities outside the home.


Are you: MARRIED LIVING TOGETHER DIVORCED WIDOW SINGLE
Are you: under 30 yrs 31-45 yrs over 45 yrs
Which Province are you from?:
Is your husband from your language group? YES NO
Does your husband have a paid job?: YES NO


1. (a) What do you think causes problems in marriage?
PLEASE IDENTIFY AT LEAST THREE MAJOR CAUSES

DISLIKE OF PARTNER SEXUAL JEALOUSY

RELATIVES/WANTOKS MONEY PROBLEMS

ALCOHOL MIXED MARRIAGE

HUSBAND HITTING WIFE GAMBLING

BRIDE-PRICE WIFE NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS

PROBLEMS WITH CHILDREN HUSBAND NOT MEET OBLIGATIONS

OTHER:


(b) If you have marked NOT MEETING OBLIGATIONS please indicate what type of obligations and what they relate to:



WIFE
HUSBAND
Type: related to:
CASH
TIME
CASH
TIME
GENERAL TRADITIONAL DEMANDS




WELFARE OF NUCLEAR FAMILY




MODERN URBAN DEMANDS





2. If you have marriage problems

(a) Do you discuss this with anyone? YES NO

(b) If Yes, are they from:

CHURCH WELFARE

LIFELINE YOUR RELATIVES

WANTOK GROUP YOUR FRIENDS

VILLAGE COURT POLICE

OTHER


3. How many husbands hit their wives in your neighbourhood or among your friends?
(a) NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS


(b) Does a next door neighbour at home hit his wife? YES NO
4. (a) In your opinion, is it alright for a husband to hit his wife?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a husband t o hit his wife?

WHEN SHE FAILS TO MEET HER OBLIGATIONS

WHEN HE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN HE IS DEFENDING HIMSELF

WHEN HE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

WHEN HER JOB INTERFERES WITH HOME LIFE

ANY TIME, A HUSBAND HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HIS WlFE


5. (a) When a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?
ALWAYS SOMETIMES NEVER
(b) If Yes, who would help her?

HOUSEHOLD MEMBER

RELATIVE/WANTOK

NEIGHBOUR/FRIEND

POLICE

STRANGERS


6. (a) In your opinion, is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, when is it alright for a wife to hit her husband?

WHEN HER HUSBAND FAILS TO MEET HIS OBLIGATIONS

WHEN SHE IS SEXUALLY JEALOUS

WHEN SHE IS DEFENDING HERSELF

WHEN SHE IS DRUNK

WHEN THERE ARE MONEY PROBLEMS

ANY TIME, A WIFE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HER HUSBAND

OTHER


7. (a) Do you ever hit your husband? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why do you hit?

IF HE DOES NOT FULFIL HIS OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HIS BEHAVIOUR MAKES ME JEALOUS

WIFE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT HER HUSBAND

WHEN I'M DRUNK

TO DEFEND MYSELF WHEN HE HITS ME

BECAUSE OF MONEY PROBLEMS


(c) If Yes, how often do you hit him?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR
(d) With what have you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


8. (a) Has your husband ever hit you? YES NO
(b) If Yes, why did he hit you?

BECAUSE HE SAID I WAS NOT FULFILLING MY OBLIGATIONS

BECAUSE HE WAS JEALOUS

HE HAS A RIGHT TO HIT ME

HE WAS DEFENDING HIMSELF WHEN I HIT HIM

BECAUSE HE WAS DRUNK

BECAUSE OF MONEY PROBLEMS


(c) If Yes, how often does he hit you?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(d) With what has he hit you?
HAND STICK KNIFE AXE THONGS STONE
BELT CHAIN OTHER:


(e) When he has hit you, have you ever -

either told the police? YES NO

or had to go to the hospital? YES NO


9. In your opinion, what could help to make marriages better?


APPENDIX 7
INTERVIEW FORM
INSTRUCTIONS FOR INTERVIEWERS


1. This form is designed for use in interviewing officials and outsiders who have knowledge about the area you are studying e.g. kiaps, C.D.Os, magistrates, health workers, policemen, village court magistrates, councillors, missionaries, teachers, businessmen, etc.


2. For each of the following items obtain any relevant information. e.g. Does the person have any files or records from which you could obtain data?


3. Your interview should cover the following points:


(a) What is the general situation regarding each topic?

(b) Has there been an increase in the problem?

(c) If Yes, what are the causes?

(d) How does the problem affect the community?

(e) How does the community cope with the problem?

(f) Ask: "How do you see your role within each of these problem areas?"

(g) Try to get details to back up statements e.g. how often, how many.
________________________________________________________________________


Name of Person:
Occupation/Designation: Mission/Government:
Location:
Sex: Age: Marital Status:
Religion:
How long working in area (Give dates):


1. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE


2. ADULTERY/SEXUAL JEALOUSY


3. DIVORCE


4. OTHER MARRIAGE PROBLEMS


5. RAPE


6. INCEST


7. VIOLENCE IN GENERAL


8. Answer the following questions:


(a) How well do you know this village in comparison with the other villages in the area?

(b) How typical is this village compared with the other villages in the area? Explain.

(c) Would you like to see changes in attitude, customs and laws with regard to the topics we have discussed?


9. For Village Court Magistrates Only:

(a) Names of villages covered by village court.

(b) Obtain a total number of cases heard by the village court broken down by type of cases. Try to get a total number for a full year. If that is not possible, state the period of time covered by your data.


(c) What is the total number of cases which have been heard by that court?

- How many of these relate to marriage problems?

- How many of these relate to domestic violence?


APPENDIX 8
SETTLEMENT QUESTIONNAIRE ON MARRIAGE


Settlement Name: Respondent's Sex: MALE FEMALE
Age: YOUNG MATURE OLD


I have some questions I would like to ask you about married life. Because some of these questions are personal I am not writing your name on this paper. It may go against your custom to talk some of these things with me. I do not want to go against your custom. If you feel strongly that you cannot talk about these things with me, please tell me and I will go on to the next question.


1. Marital Status
SINGLE MARRIED DIVORCED WIDOW(ER)


2. (a) Are you or is anybody else living in this house employed at present?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, what kind of job? GOVERNMENT COMPANY SELF-EMPLOYED

CASUAL: garden work fish firewood bottles other ................


3. How many husbands/wives have you been married to?
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


4. How many wives do you have now? (For men only)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


5. How were you married?


Type
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
Custom




Church




General Law





6. What do you think causes problems in marriages?
Lack of respect Sexual jealousy
Relatives Wife's failure to meet obligations
Gambling Incest
Husband hitting wife Alcohol
Bride-price Not enough money
Problems with children Other


7. If you have marriage problems:
(a) Do you usually discuss this with anyone?
YES NO SOMETIMES
(b) If Yes, who?


8. What causes divorce in your society?


9. (a) Do more people get divorced now than in the past?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, why do you think this is happening?


10. (a) Have you ever been divorced?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, how many times?
1 2 3 4 5
(c) If Yes, why did you divorce?


11. (a) Is it alright for a husband to hit his wife with his hands?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


12. (a) Is it alright for a husband to hit his wife with a stick or other weapon?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


(c) Specify weapon.


13. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband with her hands?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


14. (a) Is it alright for a wife to hit her husband with a stick or weapon?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, under what circumstances?


(c) Specify weapon.


15. (b) If a husband hits his wife, does anyone help the wife?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, who would help?


(c) If Yes, why would they help?


16. How many husbands hit their wives in this settlement?
NONE SOME MANY ALL HUSBANDS


17. How many wives hit their husbands in this settlement?
NONE SOME MANY ALL WIVES


18. (a) Do husbands hit their wives more often today than they used to?
YES NO DON'T KNOW


(b) If Yes, why do you think this is happening?


19. If your husband/wife were to hit you, what would you do?


20. (a) Have you ever hit your husband/wife?
YES NO
(b) If Yes, how often?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(c) With what did you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE OTHER:


(d) Where on their body did you hit?


(e) Why did you hit?


21. (a) Has your husband/wife ever hit you?
YES NO


(b) If Yes, how often?
EVERY WEEK EVERY FORTNIGHT EVERY MONTH
ONCE A YEAR MORE THAN ONCE A YEAR
LESS THAN ONCE A YEAR


(c) With what were you hit?
HAND STICK KNIFE OTHER:


(d) Where on the body were you hit?


(e) Why were you hit?


22. Is it alright for a married man to have sexual intercourse with:

(a) Single woman - YES NO

(b) Married woman - YES NO

(c) Prostitute - YES NO


23. Is it alright for a married woman to have sexual intercourse with:

(a) A single man - YES NO

(b) A married man - YES NO


24. (a) What does a wife do or say if she wants to shame or insult her husband?
(b) What happens if she does?


25. (a) What does a husband do or say if he wants to shame or insult his wife?
(b) What happens if he does this?


26. What could help to make marriage better in your place?


APPENDIX 9
HOSPITAL QUESTIONNAIRE ON SPOUSE-BEATING


No.:
DAY, DATE: TIME:


a) ASSAULT

i) how long ago was the assault:

ii) method:

iii) extent of injuries (grading):

iv) basis of past assaults (freq. and pattern):

v) needs (admission or special care):


b) MOTIVE

i) alcohol drunk prior to assault:

ii) husband's story:

iii) wife's story:

iv) contributory problems (financial, accomd.):


c) RELATIONSHIP

i) legally or traditionally married (do both families approve of relationship):

ii) years of marriage:

iii) no. of children:

iv) age of last-born:

v) are children also assaulted?

vi) own accommodation or with wantoks:

vii) family involved in marital problems:


d) PERSONAL DETAILS

age:

home province:

how long in Lae:

religion:

occupation:

income:


e) REMEDIAL ACTION

i) spouse contemplating court, or other:

ii) why:

iii) received any assistance for problems (e.g. family, church welfare):


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