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Global Drop in Intimate Partner Violence Linked to Shifts in Attitudes and Behavior

June 24, 2026
in Medicine
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A comprehensive cross-national study has shed new light on the dynamics between societal attitudes and the prevalence of intimate partner violence (IPV) against women. Researchers led by Irina Vartanova from the Institute for Futures Studies in Stockholm, Sweden, conducted an expansive analysis covering over 60 countries that reveals a compelling correlation: nations experiencing faster declines in the social acceptance of IPV are also witnessing more rapid reductions in violence rates and concurrent advancements in human development.

Intimate partner violence represents a pervasive worldwide issue that severely impacts the physical and mental health of millions of women. The consequences often manifest as injury, chronic psychological distress such as depression and anxiety, and in extreme cases, death. Prior research has elucidated that the normalization of violence within intimate relationships—where social norms tacitly or explicitly condone acts perpetrated by partners—directly influences the frequency and severity of IPV incidents. However, the evolving global landscape revealing declining acceptance of such violence demanded a nuanced exploration of what broader societal transformations might be driving these attitudinal shifts and whether such changes translate to measurable declines in actual violence.

The investigation harnessed an unprecedented dataset from the Demographic and Health Surveys Program, encompassing the attitudinal responses of more than 1.9 million women across 69 countries and over half a million men in 60 countries between 1999 and 2024. The researchers meticulously evaluated the acceptability of intimate partner violence, operationalized as the belief that a husband is justified in hitting or beating his wife under specific circumstances. This, alongside country-level data quantifying incidence rates of physical IPV against women, permitted a robust longitudinal analysis of trends at a global scale.

Results affirmed that the acceptability of intimate partner violence has substantially decreased in a vast majority of countries—89% among men and 94% among women. Strikingly, the speed of this attitudinal decline was positively associated with corresponding reductions in the actual reported prevalence of violence. This indicates a powerful social feedback loop whereby shifting norms may engender tangible reductions in IPV, or alternatively, reductions in violence may reinforce changing social norms.

Beyond social attitudes and violence metrics, the authors examined the role of human development in these trends. Utilizing the United Nations’ Human Development Index (HDI), which aggregates indicators related to education, health outcomes, and economic prosperity, they discovered a notable pattern: countries exhibiting rapid human development progress simultaneously experienced accelerated declines in IPV acceptability. Interestingly, while gender-focused measures such as the Gender Development Index (GDI) — which assesses gender disparities in human development — showed less consistent connections with attitudinal changes, the overarching societal improvements appeared vital.

These findings illuminate the complex interplay between human development and social norms. Enhanced access to education, improved health infrastructure, and rising standards of living may collectively foster conditions where violence against women is less tolerated, although the study design cautions against inferring direct causality. Structural advancements likely provide a conducive environment for normative transformations but do not single-handedly eradicate deeply entrenched cultural practices.

Corresponding author Dr. Kimmo Ericksson articulated this insight, emphasizing the significance of broad human development progress to fighting domestic violence globally. He noted the encouraging trend over the last quarter-century, where nearly all studied countries witnessed diminishing social justifications for wife-beating. “The retreat in acceptance reflects broader societal shifts,” Ericksson argued, “propelled by better schooling, improved healthcare, and enhanced living standards.”

Co-author Pontus Strimling described the consistency of declining IPV acceptance as particularly striking. He highlighted that the patterns held true across diverse cultural and geographical contexts, appearing almost universal in nature. Moreover, the researchers observed a meaningful association between the specific pace of attitudinal change and reported reductions in women’s experiences of violence, reinforcing the practical import of transforming social norms.

This extensive study, published in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health, represents one of the largest empirical efforts to date analyzing intimate partner violence attitudes and prevalence across the globe. The longitudinal approach, leveraging survey data spanning 25 years, provides a rare temporal depth that enriches understanding of global trends in gender-based violence and social change.

Importantly, the authors emphasize that despite encouraging progress, intimate partner violence remains a critical public health challenge requiring sustained and multifaceted interventions. Legal reforms, community-based programming, education campaigns, and economic empowerment initiatives all form vital components to further accelerate declines in social acceptability and violent behaviors.

The research received support from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation under Grant No. 2022.0191, with the authors declaring no competing interests influencing their findings. The open availability of the article via the DOI link (10.1371/journal.pgph.0006628) ensures that policymakers, practitioners, and the global public can engage with these pivotal insights without restriction.

Looking ahead, this landmark study substantiates arguments for integrating efforts to improve human development indicators with targeted strategies aimed at transforming social norms around intimate partner violence. While causality remains to be definitively mapped, the close association between declining tolerance for violence and human development advancements underlines a strategic path forward.

In summary, the global decline in acceptability of intimate partner violence is a promising beacon illuminating pathways toward reducing one of the most entrenched forms of gender-based harm. Coupled with ongoing improvements in education, health, and economic conditions, societies worldwide appear to be moving toward a future where the scourge of partner violence may become increasingly marginalized and socially unacceptable.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Trends in the acceptability and prevalence of intimate partner violence: Evidence from Demographic and Health Surveys, 1999–2024
News Publication Date: 24-Jun-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0006628
References: Vartanova I, Eriksson K, Strimling P (2026) Trends in the acceptability and prevalence of intimate partner violence: Evidence from Demographic and Health Surveys, 1999–2024. PLOS Glob Public Health 6(6): e0006628. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0006628
Keywords: intimate partner violence, social norms, human development, gender-based violence, Demographic and Health Surveys, public health, global trends

Tags: cross-national IPV studycultural shifts in violence acceptanceDemographic and Health Surveys IPV datagender-based violence declineglobal IPV trendsimpact of social norms on violenceintimate partner violence reductionIPV and human developmentIPV prevention strategiespsychological effects of intimate partner violencesocietal attitudes towards IPVwomen's health and IPV
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