Associate Professor Dr Azharul Islam of the Department of Educational & Counselling Psychology, University of Dhaka has published a new study in BMJ Open with co-authors Professor Dr Mahjabeen Haque, also of the Department, and Dr Mohammad Salim Chowdhury of the National Academy for Autism and Neuro-Developmental Disabilities.
Drawing on a nationally representative sample of 2,016 young adults aged 18 to 35 from all eight divisions of Bangladesh, the study asks how different types of childhood adversity predict who later perpetrates intimate partner violence. Instead of treating adverse childhood experiences as a single cumulative score, the authors separate them into two dimensions: threat, such as exposure to violence, and deprivation, such as neglect, loss, or economic hardship.
Threat-related adversity was associated with about 2.6 times higher odds of perpetrating partner violence, while deprivation-related adversity raised the odds by around 75 percent. Both men and women reported perpetration, and higher education and socioeconomic status were protective. The findings point to prevention that is trauma-informed, gender-sensitive, and adapted to regional conditions.
The study was conducted in collaboration with BRAC and the Department of Educational and Counselling.