Justice and Gender-Based Violence

Revue Internationale de Philosophie 235 (1):259-275 (2006)
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Abstract

Although sexual violence against women is on-going and widespread, it is generally not, except in some cases of rape in war-time, viewed as a politically significant phenomenon constituting a grave group-based injustice. After examining why this is the case, Brison argues that one strategy to make salient the political dimension of sexual violence is to call rape "gender-based violence" rather than "sex without consent." Doing so takes rape out of the apolitical interpersonal realm and reclassifies it as a form of injustice by situating it in the contexts of both criminal and civil rights law.

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Susan J. Brison
Dartmouth College

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Real Rape.Susan Estrich - 1989 - Ethics 99 (2):443-444.

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