Results for 'gender-based violence'

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  1.  18
    Gender-Based Violence Without a Legal Gender: Imagining Single-Sex Services in Conditions of Decertification.Flora Renz - 2023 - Feminist Legal Studies 31 (1):43-66.
    This article considers what the implications of decertification would be for single-sex services such as domestic and sexual violence support. Some reform options attached to decertification could (re)allocate authority away from the state to organisations or individuals to determine gender criteria. What would the consequences of such re-allocation be in determining eligibility to receive or access services or excluding people on the basis of a characteristic protected under equality law? Engaging with this in the context of domestic and (...)
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  2.  7
    Gender-based violence and efforts to address the phenomenon: Towards a church public pastoral care intervention proposition for community development in Zimbabwe.Vhumani Magezi & Peter Manzanga - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):1-14.
    Gender-based Violence is a huge concern in many African countries such as Zimbabwe despite the preventative and mitigatory interventions that have been proposed and implemented by various stakeholders. The interventions applied range from policies and programmes that are government initiated as well as those interventions by social actors such as non-government organisations and Faith-based Organisations like churches. Gender-based violence as a social structural issue is sustained and perpetuated by cultural norms, values and beliefs (...)
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  3.  19
    Gender-Based Violence Against Men and Boys in Darfur: The Gender-Genocide Nexus.Suzy Mcelrath, Hollie Nyseth Brehm & Gabrielle Ferrales - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (4):565-589.
    Analyses of gender-based violence during mass conflict have typically focused on violence committed against women. Violence perpetrated against men has only recently been examined as gender-based violence in its own right. Using narratives from 1,136 Darfuri refugees, we analyze patterns of gender-based violence perpetrated against men and boys during the genocide in Darfur. We examine how this violence emasculates men and boys through four mechanisms: homosexualization, feminization, genital harm, (...)
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  4.  20
    Gender-Based Violence, Law, Justice and Health: Some Reflections.Geetanjali Gangoli - 2020 - Public Health Ethics 13 (1):29-33.
    This article is a response to the Lancet Commission on the Legal Determinants of Health from gendered perspectives and focusing on gender-based violence and abuse. The Lancet Commission sees the role of law as positive, indeed central in providing justice in global contexts, and this contribution explores and unpacks this assertion, drawing on some examples from India and elsewhere. Some feminists have argued that law and justice are incompatible for women, and this is sometimes borne out when (...)
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  5.  9
    Gender-based violence as a destructive form of warfare against families: A practical theological response.Fazel E. Freeks - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (2):7.
    War is an appalling crisis and destructive force on human dignity and life. War was permitted in biblical times at the hand of God, with disastrous consequences for the nations of the Ancient World. The current war between Ukraine and Russia is fast becoming a global catastrophe, with the threat of World War III looming. Warfare destroys families, and families are vital units God instituted in society. The critical issue addressed in this article is the ruining effects of gender- (...) violence (GBV) on family life. Therefore, this article responds to GBV as a social ill and destructive form of warfare against women and aims to propose feasible, viable, and practical theological ways to curb this ruinous issue. Gender-based violence, as a form of warfare against women and children, is one of the most destructive forces regarding family life and the key reason for unstable, disrupted, and fractured families. Because this article is grounded on a practical theological response, its pastoral role is explored. Practical theology builds a theological framework for critical evaluation. It also takes a more direct role on the moral debates of society on issues such as GBV, father absence, and family violence that occurs in Church, family, and society. Contribution: This article employed a descriptive modus operandi on GBV against women and endorses the journal’s focus on family and society who is experiencing a violation of human rights and a life-threatening issue in the field of Practical Theology. (shrink)
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  6.  10
    Gender-based violence in South Africa: A narrative reflection.Wonke Buqa - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (1):8.
    The pervasiveness of gender-based violence (GBV) against women and children constitutes the most severe expression of discrimination and dehumanisation of women and children in South Africa. Even before the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic came, domestic violence was already one of the greatest human rights violations. Women for centuries suffered different forms of violation and continue to struggle in subtle forms in the 21st century. This article investigates the sociocultural theories, narrative reflections and COVID-19 pandemic challenges (...)
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  7.  31
    Gender-Based Violence in Pakistan's Digital Spaces.Cameran Ashraf & Shirin Naseer - 2021 - Feminist Legal Studies 30 (1):29-50.
    The provisions of United Nations’ Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) provisions and the CEDAW Committee’s recommendations expand on the theoretical and practical ways in which countries can combat gender-based discrimination. In Pakistan, the digitisation of women and feminist collectives and their experience of violent misogyny on the internet accentuates the weakness of the country’s internet security mechanisms. This study utilises the human rights framework of CEDAW to assess the performance of Pakistan’s (...)
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  8.  21
    Is Gender-Based Violence a Social Norm? Rethinking Power in a Popular Development Intervention.Elise Klein, Kalissa Alexeyeff, Amanda Gilbertson & Amy Piedalue - 2020 - Feminist Review 126 (1):89-105.
    Changing social norms has become the preferred approach in global efforts to prevent gender-based violence (GBV). In this article, we trace the rise of social norms within GBV-related policy and practice and their transformation from social processes that exist in the world to beliefs that exist in the minds of individuals. The analytic framework that underpins social norms approaches has been subject to ongoing critical revision but continues to have significant issues in its conceptualisation of power and (...)
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  9.  12
    A survey on gender-based violence – The paradox of trust between women and men in South Africa: A missiological scrutiny.Zuze J. Banda - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (1):9.
    South Africa continues to be plagued by gender-based violence (GBV). Recurring incidents of GBV cram news tabloids, social and electronic media, creating the impression of a country at war with itself. Of great concern is that, at the centre of these killings, men are allegedly the main culprits. This then has unleashed national protest campaigns, one notably, by the name #menaretrash, led by activists, mostly women, who angrily voice their disquiet against men. As a response, it was (...)
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  10.  13
    Rethinking the problem of gender-based violence in South Africa: a conversational perspective.Diana Ekor Ofana - 2019 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 8 (3):89-100.
    This paper argues for an understanding of the problem of gender-based violence, specifically, the problem of rape that is not only based on sociological and psychological factors but also based on morality. This is premised on the fact that research on the problem of rape in South Africa points to different causes other than morality. I contend that besides social and psychological factors; rape should also be analyzed as a problem of moral failings. Hence, I (...)
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  11.  10
    What’s Gendered about Gender-Based Violence?: An Empirically Grounded Theoretical Exploration from Tanzania.Hilde Jakobsen - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (4):537-561.
    Violence is often considered gendered on the basis that it is violence against women. This assumption is evident both in “gender-based violence” interventions in Africa and in the argument that gender is irrelevant if violence is also perpetrated against men. This article examines the relation of partner violence not to biological sex, but to gender as conceptualized in feminist theory. It theorizes the role of gender as an analytical category in (...)
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  12.  7
    Justice and Gender-Based Violence.Susan J. Brison - 2006 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 235 (1):259-275.
    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 (...)
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  13.  5
    Effects of gender-based violence on students’ well-being: A case of Mufulira College.Misheck Samakao & Hellen Manda - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (3):7.
    Institutions of higher learning have continued to record high cases of gender-based violence (GBV) despite all efforts put in place to fight the vice. The most common forms of GBV are physical, sexual assault and psychological violence. Women and girls make up the majority of the GBV victims worldwide. For many years, institutions of higher learning have proved to be fertile environments for GBV cases. The purpose of this study was to investigate effects of GBV on (...)
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  14.  11
    Feminist Lecture: (Re) Imagining Gender-Based Violence as a Strategy for Enforcing Institutional Segregation and Reproducing Structural Inequalities.Angela J. Hattery - 2022 - Gender and Society 36 (6):789-812.
    In this article, I develop a framework for re-imagining gender-based violence not as an outgrowth of patriarchy but as a response to the threat of gender integration and the inversion of the gendered hierarchy. I argue that this reconceptualization is critical to re-envisioning not just research but also prevention and intervention strategies. I begin by identifying two reasons for the stalled revolution in reducing rates of gender-based violence: the focus on intimate partner (...) and sexual violence as distinct rather than as similar tools that are simply deployed in different spaces, and the de-centering of Black feminist voices and the obscuring of the similarities between gender-based violence and racialized violence. Finally, I conclude with recommendations to transform policies and hegemonic ideologies that limit the impact of gender-based violence—including by holding perpetrators accountable—and render it socially unacceptable, thus creating the foundation for building social institutions that are diverse, inclusive, and equitable. (shrink)
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  15.  14
    Ending Gender-Based Violence: Justice and Community in South Africa. Hannah Britton. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2020 (ISBN: 978-0-252-08496-6). [REVIEW]Amanda Gouws - forthcoming - Hypatia:1-4.
  16.  25
    Lessons Never Learned: Crisis and genderbased violence.Neetu John, Sara E. Casey, Giselle Carino & Terry McGovern - 2020 - Developing World Bioethics 20 (2):65-68.
    The COVID‐19 pandemic exposes underlying inequalities in our socio‐economic and health systems, such as genderbased violence (GBV). In emergencies, particularly ones that involve quarantine, GBV often increases. Policymakers must utilize community expertise, technology and existing global guidelines to disrupt these trends in the early stages of the COVID‐19 epidemic. Gender norms and roles relegating women to the realm of care work puts them on the frontlines in an epidemic, while often excluding them from developing the response. (...)
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  17.  7
    Efforts to Enhance Education About Gender-Based Violence: A Teacher Workshop and Toolkit.Catherine Vanner & Salsabel Almanssori - 2024 - Studies in Social Justice 18 (2):362-371.
  18.  9
    Legal Challenges to Countering Gender-Based Violence in Posthumanism Society: International Experience and Ukrainian Realities.Natalia Lesko, Iryna Khomyshyn, Maryana Tsvok, Roman Havrik & Iryna Kaniuka - 2020 - Postmodern Openings 11 (2supl1):273-287.
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  19.  32
    Justice and Gender-Based Violence.Susan J. Brison - 2013 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 265 (3):259-275.
  20.  14
    Resistance in health and healthcare: Applying Essex conceptualisation to a multiphased study on the experiences of Australian nurses and midwives who provide abortion care to people victimised by genderbased violence.Lydia Mainey, Cathy O'Mullan & Kerry Reid-Searl - 2022 - Bioethics 37 (2):199-207.
    In this article, we explore the act of resistance by nurses and midwives at the nexus of abortion care and gender-based violence. We commence with a brief overview of a multiphased extended grounded theory doctoral project that analysed the individual, situational and socio-political experiences of Australian nurses and midwives who provide abortion care to people victimised by gender-based violence. We then turn to Essex's conceptualisation of resistance in health and healthcare and draw upon these (...)
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  21.  6
    Resistance in health and healthcare: Applying Essex conceptualisation to a multiphased study on the experiences of Australian nurses and midwives who provide abortion care to people victimised by genderbased violence.Lydia Mainey, Cathy O'Mullan & Kerry Reid-Searl - 2022 - Bioethics 37 (2):199-207.
    In this article, we explore the act of resistance by nurses and midwives at the nexus of abortion care and gender-based violence. We commence with a brief overview of a multiphased extended grounded theory doctoral project that analysed the individual, situational and socio-political experiences of Australian nurses and midwives who provide abortion care to people victimised by gender-based violence. We then turn to Essex's conceptualisation of resistance in health and healthcare and draw upon these (...)
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  22.  6
    John 8:3–11 and gender-based violence in Johane Marange Apostolic Church, Ruwa District, Zimbabwe.Lovejoy Chabata - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 79 (4):8.
    John 8:3–11 depicts the story of a woman who is condemned to death because she was caught in the act of adultery. The Pharisees and Scribes who condemned the woman cited Deuteronomy 22:23–24 and Leviticus 20:10 which prescribe death penalty for adultery. What begs answers through this hermeneutical study of the pericope from the lens of gender-based violence (GBV) in Johane Marange Apostolic Church, Ruwa District, in Zimbabwe, is why only the woman was picked for condemnation yet (...)
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  23.  21
    Femicide and Public Health Ethics: Approaching Gender-based Violence and Death in the Health Professions.Esha Bansal, Krishna Patel, Yonis Hassan & Timothy Rice - 2023 - Public Health Ethics 16 (2):117-122.
    Femicide is an ongoing public health and human rights crisis of global proportions. Currently, however, there is a relative vacuum of ethics theory and discussion about femicide amongst the health professions. This article draws from three illustrative case examples along the continuum of femicide to explore contemporary ethical concerns relevant to addressing gender-based violence and death through clinical medicine and public health. Using an epistemic justice framework, we analyze the relative invisibility of femicide in public health discourse (...)
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  24.  3
    The spiritual experiences of women victims of gender-based violence: A case study of Thohoyandou.Christina Landman & Lufuluvhi M. Mudimeli - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (3).
    This article reports on interviews conducted with 11 women at the Thohoyandou Victim Empowerment Programme, a centre located in Sibasa, Thohoyandou, in the Limpopo province of South Africa. The centre provides support and advocacy to female survivors of domestic violence. The participants were victims of gender-based violence and the study aimed at exploring the spiritual experiences of women assaulted by their partners. Interviews were conducted over 4 days and were held on the TVEP premises. This article (...)
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  25.  12
    Feminist Dilemmas: How to Talk About Gender-Based Violence in Relation to the Middle East?Nadje Al-Ali - 2019 - Feminist Review 122 (1):16-31.
    The article charts my trajectories as a feminist activist/academic seeking to research, write and talk about gender-based violence in relation to the Middle East. More specifically, I am drawing on research and activism in relation to Iraq, Turkey and Lebanon to map the discursive, political and empirical challenges and complexities linked to scholarship and activism that is grounded in both feminist and anti-racist/anti-islamophobic politics. While reflecting on my positionality, the article aims to challenge the binary of activism (...)
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  26.  16
    Gender relations and social justice in Africa: Toward a duty-based approach to gender-based violence.Abiodun Paul Afolabi & Edwin Etieyibo - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):230-245.
    A large and important part of social relations is gender relations between men and women. Over time, the manifestation of such relations has often been one of violence, particularly violence against women. Different approaches have been deployed to deal with the experience of gender-based violence (GBV). One popular approach is the human rights framework that suggest that GBV can be addressed by granting certain rights to women. We argue that while a human rights framework (...)
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  27.  17
    Blessings or curses? The contribution of the blesser phenomenon to gender-based violence and intimate partner violence.Brent V. Frieslaar & Maake Masango - 2021 - HTS Theological Studies 77 (4):1-9.
    This article examines the blesser phenomenon in South Africa, which gained rapid popularity in 2016. A large body of research exists that reveals that transactional sex is a significant theme within the phenomenon of blesser and blessee relationships. Scholarship has demonstrated that transactional sex has contributed to an increase in human immunodeficiency virus infection rates, especially amongst women aged 15–24 years, as well as a concerning increase in teenage pregnancy. Whilst these are dire realities of blesser–blessee relationships, the one that (...)
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  28. Gender-Based Administrative Violence as Colonial Strategy.Elena Ruíz & Nora Berenstain - 2018 - Philosophical Topics 46 (2):209-227.
    There is a growing trend across North America of women being criminalized for their pregnancy outcomes. Rather than being a series of aberrations resulting from institutional failures, we argue that this trend is part of a colonial strategy of administrative violence aimed at women of color and Native women across Turtle Island. We consider a range of medical and legal practices constituting gender-based administrative violence, and we argue that they are the result of non-accidental and systematic (...)
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  29.  12
    A Woman in Berlin: Reappraising Mass Sexual and Gender-Based Violence in Public Health.Esha Bansal - 2023 - Public Health Ethics 16 (2):123-126.
    Preventing sexual and gender-based violence—and mitigating its devastating impacts on individuals and societies—is a central challenge of public health. A Woman in Berlin is 34-year-old journalist Marta Hillers’s first-hand account of life during the 1945 Red Army occupation of Berlin at the conclusion of World War II, when Russian soldiers collectively raped 2 million German civilians. Reflecting upon Hillers’s testimony, I argue that historical narratives about large-scale acts of sexual and gender-based violence deserve a (...)
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  30.  13
    The Making of a Human Rights Issue: A Cross-National Analysis of Gender-Based Violence in Textbooks, 1950-2011.Christine Min Wotipka, Julia C. Lerch & S. Garnett Russell - 2018 - Gender and Society 32 (5):713-738.
    In the past few decades, awareness around gender-based violence has expanded on a global scale with increased attention in global treaties, organizations, and conferences. Previously a taboo topic, it is now viewed as a human rights violation in the broader world culture. Drawing on a quantitative analysis of 568 textbooks from 76 countries from across the world, we examine the extent to which this growing global attention to GBV has filtered down into national educational curricula. We find (...)
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  31.  12
    Online activism and subject construction of the victim of gender-based violence on Spanish YouTube channels: Multimodal analysis and performativity.Rainer Rubira García, Diana Fernández Romero & Sonia Núñez Puente - 2015 - European Journal of Women's Studies 22 (3):319-333.
    This article analyzes the construction of female subjectivity in the specific context of audiovisual cyberspaces in Spain dedicated to the struggle against violence against women. Looking at the YouTube channels of two virtual feminist communities that deal with violence against women, the authors analyze how the victim-subject is configured in terms of agency and activism. The authors adopt a multimodal model of studying the sign complexes of the videos as semiotic artifacts that produce meaning. Sign complexes are always (...)
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  32.  5
    PRO-Mueve Relaciones Sanas – A Gender-Based Violence Prevention Program for Adolescents: Assessment of Its Efficacy in the First Year of Intervention.Lilian Velasco, Helena Thomas-Currás, Yolanda Pastor-Ruiz & Aroa Arcos-Rodríguez - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    PRO-Mueve Relaciones Sanas is a gender-based violence and dating violence prevention program targeted at adolescents. The program has been designed to be implemented during three consecutive courses [from the first to third year of Spanish mandatory secondary education ] in 8 annual sessions, imparted by university students who have been previously trained and supervised by university professors. The present study evaluates the effects of the program after the first year of implementation through a quasi-experimental design and (...)
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  33.  11
    Online feminist practice, participatory activism and public policies against gender-based violence in Spain.Susana Vázquez Cupeiro, Diana Fernández Romero & Sonia Núñez Puente - 2017 - Feminist Theory 18 (3):299-321.
    This article presents and reflects upon the results of a survey involving a sample of women who have experienced gender-based violence and who have turned to an institutional centre to tackle their situation. In aiming to move beyond a descriptive treatment, we consider the plurality of user types and their remote use patterns in relation to the resources offered by virtual feminist communities designed to promote increased sociopolitical mobilisation in the fight against violence against women. We (...)
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  34.  38
    The Special Court for Sierra Leone’s Consideration of Gender-based Violence: Contributing to Transitional Justice? [REVIEW]Valerie Oosterveld - 2009 - Human Rights Review 10 (1):73-98.
    Serious gender-based crimes were committed against women and girls during Sierra Leone’s decade-long armed conflict. This article examines how the Special Court for Sierra Leone has approached these crimes in its first four judgments. The June 20, 2007 trial judgment in the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council case assists international criminal law’s limited understanding of the crime against humanity of forced marriage, but also collapses evidence of that crime into the war crime of outrages upon personal dignity. The February (...)
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  35. Nancy S. Jecker.Donnie J. Self & Gender-Based Explanations - 1994 - Contemporary Issues in Bioethics 16:58.
  36.  18
    Black Women’s Lives Matter: Social Movements and Storytelling against Sexual and Gender-based Violence in the US.Domale Dube Keys - 2021 - Feminist Review 128 (1):163-168.
  37.  16
    Tropical storm in the Philippines and in Vietnam: A critical need for genderbased violence prevention.Saverio Bellizzi, Katherina Molek & Alessandra Nivoli - 2022 - Developing World Bioethics 22 (4):187-188.
  38.  20
    Waiting opportunities: adolescent girls experiences of gender-based violence at schools.Sadiyya Haffejee, P. Maharaj, C. Munthree, M. Melek, A. B. Albrectsen, M. Agduk, N. Bojorquez, A. Cordoba, G. Barker & V. I. Rickert - 2007 - Journal of Biosocial Science 39 (2):231-244.
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  39.  15
    Investigating Domestic Violence and Abuse Through Linguistic Choices in Slum Child: A Gender-Based Study.Tarim Masood & Tazanfal Tehseem - 2022 - Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 61 (2):49-69.
    _This study investigates how domestic violence and abuse have been portrayed in Bina Shah’s Slum Child. The study analyzes how women’s portrayal construes domestic violence, abuse, marginalization, and victimization. The study employs Thematic Roles given by Andrew and Radford, as cited in Saeed to explore the linguistic choices which are significant in reflecting the underlying ideology of the author. Research shows that the beats, mourns, screams, and shouts of the female characters as portrayed in the novel represent the (...)
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  40.  14
    The Efficiency of Intersectionality: Labelling the Benefits of a Rights-Based Approach to Interpret Sexual and Gender-Based Crimes.Ana Martin - 2024 - Human Rights Review 25 (1):1-24.
    International criminal law (ICL) has traditionally overlooked sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) and struggles to understand it. Prosecutions have been largely inefficient and not reflective of gender harms. The Rome Statute requires interpreting SGBV as a social construction (article 7(3)), in consistency with international human rights law (IHRL) and without discrimination (article 21(3)). There is, however, little guidance to implement these approaches. This article argues that intersectionality, an IHRL-based approach that reveals compounded discrimination, is an (...)
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  41.  17
    What’s in a name? Theorising the Inter-relationships of gender and violence.Karen Boyle - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (1):19-36.
    This article explores the representational practices of feminist theorising around gender and violence. Adapting Liz Kelly’s notion of the continuum of women’s experiences of sexual violence, I argue that ‘continuum thinking’ can offer important interventions which unsettle binaries, recognise grey areas in women’s experiences and avoid ‘othering’ specific communities. Continuum thinking allows us to understand connections whilst nevertheless maintaining distinctions that are important conceptually, politically and legally. However, this is dependent upon recognising the multiplicity of continuums in (...)
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  42.  19
    Interrogating cultural narratives about ‘honour’- based violence.Avtar Brah & Aisha K. Gill - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (1):72-86.
    On 3 August 2012, Shafilea Ahmed’s parents were convicted of her murder, nine years after the brutal ‘honour’ killing. The case offers important insights into how ‘honour’-based violence might be tackled without constructing non-Western cultures as inherently uncivilised. Critiquing the framing devices that structure British debates about ‘honour’-based violence demonstrates the prevalence of Orientalist tropes, revealing the need for new ways of thinking about culture that do not reify it or treat it as a singular entity (...)
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  43. De/gendering violence and racialising blame in Swedish child welfare: what has childhood got to do with it?Zlatana Knezevic, Maria Eriksson & Mia Heikkilä - 2021 - Journal of Gender-Based Violence 5 (2): 199-214(16).
    This article is a critical interrogation of how gender and power figure in Swedish child welfare policy and the discourses on violence in intimate relationships vis-à-vis children exposed to violence. Drawing on feminist violence research, critical childhood studies, and intersectional perspectives, we identify a differentiation with racialised undertones in the understanding of violence as a social problem when related to children’s exposure. While predominately gender-neutral discourses of social heredity and epidemiology run through the material (...)
     
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  44.  10
    Gender Violence: Resistance, Resilience, and Autonomy.Sylvia Jane Burrow - 2022 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    Sylvia Burrow explores self-confidence as integral to autonomy development within everyday contexts threatening gender violence, arguing that self-defense training is significant to resistance and resilience. -/- Choice Reviews, December 2022 Issue: “Gender Violence explores the myths and realities of the threat of gender-based violence and active forms of resistance to it…. She advocates specifically for martial arts and self-defense programs rooted in feminist frameworks. These are the most successful because they resist rape culture (...)
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  45. Gendered Language and Gendered Violence.Astghik Mavisakalyan, Lewis Davis & Clas Weber - manuscript
    This study establishes the influence of sex-based grammatical gender on gendered violence. We demonstrate a statistically significant relationship between gendered language and the incidence of intimate partner violence in a cross-section of countries. Motivated by this evidence, we conduct an individual-level analysis exploiting the differences in the language structures spoken by individuals with a shared religious and ethnic background residing in the same country. We show that speaking a gendered language is associated with the belief that (...)
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  46.  92
    Fighting gender violence with behavioral public policy: scope and limitations.Alejandro Hortal - 2023 - Retos 13 (25):61-75.
    Since the concept of “nudge” was introduced in 2008 by Thaler and Sunstein, proposing that small interventions based on changes in choice architectures can alter people’s behavior and make it easier for them to achieve their desired goals, the application in public policy of behavioral economics has gained significant attention. This has led to the emergence of different types of policies based on behavioral insights, which have been used in a variety of areas, including health or finance, with (...)
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  47. Reproductive Violence and Settler Statecraft.Elena Ruíz, Nora Berenstain & Nerli Paredes-Ruvalcaba - 2023 - In Sanaullah Khan & Elliott Schwebach (eds.), Global Histories of Trauma: Globalization, Displacement and Psychiatry. Routledge. pp. 150-173.
    Gender-based forms of administrative violence, such as reproductive violence, are the result of systems designed to enact population-level harms through the production and forcible imposition of colonial systems of gender. Settler statecraft has long relied on the strategic promotion of sexual and reproductive violence. Patterns of reproductive violence adapt and change to align with the enduring goals and evolving needs of settler colonial occupation, dispossession, and containment. The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision to (...)
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  48.  7
    Ethnicity, gender, and marital violence: South asian women's organizations in the united states.Margaret Abraham - 1995 - Gender and Society 9 (4):450-468.
    Based on a two-stage questionnaire with six South Asian organizations that focus on South Asian women, this article examines the factors that determined the creation of such organizations. Through an analysis of their organizational ideology, structure, goals, and strategies, the article demonstrates their relevance and the instrumental role they play in shifting marital violence among South Asians in the United States from a “private problem” to a “social issue.” Central to the analysis is how ethnicity and gender (...)
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    Gender, Violence and the Neoliberal State in India.Navtej Purewal, Jennifer Ung Loh & Kalpana Wilson - 2018 - Feminist Review 119 (1):1-6.
    This article explores sex selective abortion as a form of structural violence within the broader notion of women's ‘protection’ in contemporary India. While SSA tends to be framed more generally within ethical and choice-based frameworks around abortion access and reproductive ‘rights’, and specifically in India around preference for sons as a discriminatory, cultural, technological misogyny, this article argues that sex selective abortion in India needs to be understood as an outcome of broader systemic economic, political and social processes. (...)
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  50. 'Gender is the first terrorist': Homophobic and Transphobic Violence in Greece.Anna Carastathis - 2018 - Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies 39 (2):265-296.
    In the summer and autumn of 2015, I met with activists in Athens and Thessaloniki, with the aim of collaboratively producing a conceptual mapping of LGBTQ social movement discourses. My point of entry was the use and signification of “racism” in LGBTQ discourses (and more generally in common parlance in Greek) as a superordinate or “umbrella” concept that includes “homophobic” and “transphobic” but also “misogynist,” “ageist,” “ableist,” and class- or status-based prejudice, discrimination, and oppression, in addition to that, of (...)
     
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