cover image: Motu Working Paper 24-01 - Who can leave a partner who

Motu Working Paper 24-01 - Who can leave a partner who

6 Mar 2024

To examine the persistence of IPV and barriers to leaving, we focus on the period between the antenatal and 9-month surveys and the period between the 54-month and 8-year surveys. [...] Third, focussing on mothers who are in a relationship at the start of one of the inter-survey periods and for whom we have relationship status at the end of the inter-survey period, we use regression analysis to investigate the personal and relationship characteristics associated with a relationship ending by the end of the period, and how these differ if IPV is present. [...] We refer to the probability a relationship ends if IPV is present minus the probability it ends if IPV is not present as the ‘marginal effect of IPV on a relationship ending’.4 For this analysis, we run probit regressions where the dependent variable is an indicator for the mother’s relationship having ended by the end of the period, and control for the characteristics shown to be significantly as. [...] We also use characteristics of the mother and sometimes her partner in the first of the two surveys and the antenatal survey as controls in the regressions. [...] Instead, Table 1 provides descriptive statistics that show how the average characteristics of mothers vary when we restrict the sample by requiring partners to be surveyed, reports of IPV to be non-missing, mothers to remain in the survey until the 54-month wave, or the mother’s relationship status to be known in the survey after a survey in which she was in a relationship with known IPV status.

Authors

Isabelle Sin

Pages
182
Published in
New Zealand

Table of Contents