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Too Cold to Cope, Too Hot to Work: Extreme Temperatures and Intimate Partner Violence

The increasing frequency of extreme weather events poses significant socioeconomic challenges, particularly for vulnerable populations in developing countries. This paper investigates the impact of temperature exposure on intimate partner violence (IPV) using individual-level data from the 2008 Bolivian Demographic and Health Survey matched with high-resolution daily climate data. Employing a temperature binning approach with fixed effects, I find substantial heterogeneous effects by altitude: in low-altitude areas, ten additional days of extreme cold (below 21°C) or extreme heat (33°C or higher) significantly increase IPV incidence by 3.6 and 2.2 percentage points, respectively, while moderate cold temperatures reduce IPV incidence. Moreover, cold exposure increases IPV through heightened male alcohol consumption and income instability, particularly in rural and indigenous communities, while heat exposure reduces women’s employment in urban, non-indigenous households. Overall, the results demonstrate that the effects of temperature exposure are highly contextual and heterogeneous, underscoring the need for climate adaptation policies that are sensitive to socioeconomic status and gender so that they can contribute to the broader goal of reducing violence against women.

Nov 2025

Socioeconomic Gradient in the Incidence, Frequency, and Severity of Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence from Latin America

This paper empirically examines how socioeconomic status (SES) shapes intimate partner violence (IPV) incidence in Latin America. Using Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) data, I provide an in-depth analysis of the mechanisms linking SES and IPV, and highlight pathways for targeted interventions and policy design to better support women at risk.

Nov 2025