“…For instance, in a cross-continental study about GBV carried out by the World Health Organization, and featuring Namibia, Ethiopia, and Tanzania, up to 71 per cent of the surveyed women reported having experienced physical or sexual violence from intimate partners (Ellsberg et al, 2008 in Stark and Ager, 2011). Other IPV-themed studies show the relationship between IPV and post-traumatic stress disorder (Gupta et al, 2014); the need for developing intervention programs targeted at fostering progressive attitudes towards GBV (Odwe et al, 2018); or the link between male socialisation, urban pressure and the use of hard drugs by mostly men, to IPV (Cardoso et al, 2016; Fry et al, 2019; Sharma et al, 2020). Some studies also highlighted the dangers of non-partner violence in humanitarian contexts, demonstrating that women may suffer violence or abuse from in-laws, neighbours or kin, leading to negative impacts on their psychosocial wellbeing, among other implications (Falb et al, 2013; Izumi, 2007; Murphy et al, 2020).…”