Violence against women (VAW) and girls is not just a
major public health problem but also a grave violation of human rights. It
extremely manifests gender inequity, targeting women and girls because of their
subordinate status in the society. The United Nations define VAW as “any act of
gender-based violence that results in, or likely to result in, physical,
sexual, or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts,
coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or
private life.” Violence and
the threats of violence can be experienced by every woman of any age, skin
color, gender identity, ethnicity, religion, disabilities, economic, and social
status.
Global estimates by the World
Health Organization indicate that about 1 in 3 women (35%) worldwide
have experienced either physical and/or sexual violence from intimate partner
or non-partner in their lifetime. In the Philippines, the National
Demographic Health Survey 2017 released by the Philippine Statistics
Authority revealed that 1 in 4 Filipino women, aged 15-49, has experienced
physical, emotional or sexual violence from their husband or partner.
Because VAW appears
as one of the country’s pervasive social problems, various measures and
mechanisms have been employed and implemented to address it. One of which is
the 18-Day Campaign to End VAW, an advocacy campaign that is observed annually
from November 25 to December 12 as mandated by Proclamation 1172 s. 2006
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