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Roberta Rosa Valtorta
Adjunct Professor


Department of Psychology

University of Milano-Bicocca



More inequality, more violence acceptance? Investigating the link between economic inequality and tolerance of gender-based violence


Journal article


Roberta Rosa Valtorta
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, vol. 26, 2026, pp. e70079


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APA   Click to copy
Valtorta, R. R. (2026). More inequality, more violence acceptance? Investigating the link between economic inequality and tolerance of gender-based violence. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 26, e70079. https://doi.org/10.1111/asap.70079


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Valtorta, Roberta Rosa. “More Inequality, More Violence Acceptance? Investigating the Link between Economic Inequality and Tolerance of Gender-Based Violence.” Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy 26 (2026): e70079.


MLA   Click to copy
Valtorta, Roberta Rosa. “More Inequality, More Violence Acceptance? Investigating the Link between Economic Inequality and Tolerance of Gender-Based Violence.” Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, vol. 26, 2026, p. e70079, doi:10.1111/asap.70079.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{roberta2026a,
  title = {More inequality, more violence acceptance? Investigating the link between economic inequality and tolerance of gender-based violence},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy},
  pages = {e70079},
  volume = {26},
  doi = {10.1111/asap.70079},
  author = {Valtorta, Roberta Rosa}
}

Abstract

Beyond its well-documented health-related effects, economic inequality has significant sociopsychological consequences. This research examines how perceived economic inequality is associated with tolerance of gender-based violence through status anxiety and sexualization processes. Across three studies involving Italian heterosexual women, results showed that higher levels of perceived economic inequality, combined with a low socioeconomic status, were associated with increased status anxiety, self-sexualization, and enjoyment of sexualization. These psychological factors, in turn, predicted greater tolerance of gender-based violence, particularly in terms of minimizing male behavior. Study 1 (N = 300) provided correlational evidence of these relationships. Through an experimental design, Study 2 (N = 218) confirmed the role of perceived inequality and low socioeconomic status in reinforcing these dynamics. Study 3 (N = 211) replicated the effect of inequality and status on attitudes toward gender-based violence using an implicit measure. By revealing the psychological mechanisms linking perceived economic inequality and socioeconomic position to violence acceptance, this research underscores the urgency of addressing economic disparities to drive social change and highlights potentially harmful adaptive strategies that women may adopt in response to unequal social and economic contexts.


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