“…In the literature on women's responses to IPV, women's agency has largely been conceptualised in relation to two particular actions: (1) reporting the violence to formal sources (police, health and social services, the justice system, shelters) or informal sources (family, friends, neighbours) (Andersson et al, 2010;Kim & Lee, 2011), and (2) leaving the abusive relationship (Scheffer, Lindgren & Renck, 2008). In this paper we are interested in exploring women's agency and IPV in constrained social contexts: settings where violence against women is socially and/or culturally acceptable, and actions such as reporting or leaving a violent relationship are rarely, if ever, taken (Kouyoumdjian et al, 2013;Linos & Kawachi, 2012;Ting & Panchanadeswaran, 2009;Uthman, Lawoko, & Moradi, 2009). In such contexts, two of the reasons women are unlikely to report violence are because they themselves are tolerant of IPV (Rizo & Macy, 2011;Schuler & Islam, 2008;Ting & Panchanadeswaran, 2009) or because they lack knowledge about available options (Saito, Cooke, Creedy, & Chaboyer, 2009).…”