Effects of domestic violence on women's labor outcomes evidence from Peru 2007-2012
Professor Advisor
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Duarte Vásquez, Fabián Rolando
Author
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Rueda Sierra, Leidy Laura
Staff editor
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Escuela de Postgrado, Economía y Negocios
CL
Admission date
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2016-03-16T19:38:57Z
Available date
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2016-03-16T19:38:57Z
Publication date
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2015-06
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/137139
General note
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Tesis para optar al grado de Magíster en Políticas Públicas
CL
Abstract
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This paper examines the impact of domestic violence (physical, sexual and emotional) on
indigenous and non-indigenous Womens’ employment in Peru, where domestic violence levels are
the highest in the region. Evidence suggests that the effects of domestic violence are not
homogeneous across ethnic groups. Using information from Peru’s Demographic and Health
Survey (DHS) from 2007 to 2012 and addressing possible endogeneity problems, I find that
women’s age, years of education, and pregnancy are correlated with the probability of job exit.
Being a victim of violence, therefore, increases the probability of job exit by 6.4pp; this effect is
statistically significant and, show that violence against women affects their labor market outcomes.
However, I also find that indigenous women are 2.1pp less likely to lose or leave their jobs than
non-indigenous women when they suffer violence. This paper contributes an understanding of how
violence affects women's labor outcomes by taking account differences by area and ethnic group.