Title: Firearms and Domestic Violence
1Firearms and Domestic Violence
Coalition for Gun Control
2OVERVIEW
- The Problem
- Role of Firearms Legislation
- Gender, Attitudes, Change
- Implementation Issues
- Conclusions and Implications for research and
policy
3THE PROBLEM
- Women are affected differently by guns
- In many contexts, more women are killed by
intimate partners than strangers - When guns are available they are used in violence
against women - Guns are more lethal more women die
- A gun in the home is a major risk factor for
femicide - Guns are also used to threaten and subjugate
women - Psychological and other impacts are significant
- Risks to children and for suicide increase
- Patterns are trans-national
4Female Homicide Rates for 25 Populous High-Income
Countries, 1994 to 1999 (per 100,000)
5Femicide WITH GUNS WITHOUT GUNS TOTAL
GUNS rate rate rate
LOW Â Â Â
Hong Kong 0.03 0.73 0.76
Sweden 0.04 0.76 0.80
Netherlands 0.14 0.66 0.80
Germany 0.11 0.55 0.66
Spain 0.11 0.38 0.49
MEDIUM Â Â Â
Australia 0.27 0.87 1.14
Canada 0.29 0.67 0.96
Portugal 0.30 0.31 0.64
HIGH Â Â Â
Switzerland 0.61 0.72 1.34
United States 1.54 1.67 3.21
6eg. Canada Understand patterns
- 85 of women murdered in Canada killed by
intimate partners versus 15 of men - In 1991 1/3 of murders of women by husbands in
Canada with guns - 88 long guns - Most killed in their homes
- 50 killers committed suicide
- risk factors alcohol, financial problems,
marital breakdown, mental illness - for every death many are threatened broader
impacts - presence of firearm is a predictor of femicide,
higher number of victims, murder-suicide - three inquests tell the story (Kassonde, May,
Vernon)
7Domestic Violence Risk Factors
Separation from spouse 82
Depression 73
History of domestic violence 73
Prior threats to commit suicide or suicide attempts 55
Possession or access to firearms 55
Obsessive behaviour 45
Control of the victims activities 45
Excessive alcohol and/or drug use 45
Attempts to isolate the victim 36
Escalation of violence 36
Destruction of the victims property 27
8Perpetrator unemployed 27
Prior threats to kill the victim 27
Forced sexual acts or assaults during sex 18
Isolation of victim 18
New partner in victim's life 18
Perpetrator witnessed domestic violence as a child 18
Violence against pets or livestock 18
9ROLE OF FIREARMS LEGISLATION
- UN Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal
Justice (1998) called on states to recognize the
relevance of firearm regulation in addressing
violence against women - many countries explicitly target violence against
women within firearms legislation
10The Role of Legislation
- Reduce the probability those who are a risk to
themselves or others will obtain firearms - Reduce diversion of legal guns to illegal markets
raise barriers and effective prices - eg. screening processes for domestic violence,
spousal notification, safe storage - Implementation is key police, physicians,
educators, shelters
11Impact of Legislation
- Reducing access to firearms in the home reduces
lethality - In Great Britain, Australia and Canada, rates of
women killed with guns dropped more than rates of
men killed with guns (women more often killed in
the home) - Rates of women killed with other means did not
drop as dramatically - Laws both shape and reflect values strong gun
control reinforces values of non violence
12Homicides of women with firearms  1991 1995 2004
Number 85 43 32 -62
Rate per 100,000 0.6 0.29 0.2 -67
Homicides of women without firearms   Â
Number 185 152 166 -10
Rate per 100,000 1.3 1.02 1.04 -20
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14GENDER, ATTITUDES, CHANGE
- Freedom from fear? There are significant gender
splits in attitudes to firearms - Canada 36 males, 59 females feared you or
someone in your household would be threatened or
injured with a firearm
15Support for Gun Control LegislationJanuary 2003
46-Firearms ownership
Q.46 The Government of Canada has passed a law
concerning the ownership of firearms. This law
requires that Canadians register each firearm
that they own, prohibits certain kinds of
firearms, requires that owners pass a safety test
and a safety check, and that firearms are stored
unloaded in a secure place. In general, do you
support or oppose this law? Would that be
strongly or somewhat?
16- While male dominated societies often justify
small arms possession through the alleged need to
protect vulnerable women, women actually face
greater danger of violence when their families
and communities are armed - - Barbara Frey, UN Special Rapporteur on Human
Rights
17Resistance
- Higher rates of gun ownership AND domestic
violence in honour cultures - Link between attitudes to women, willingness to
kill, homicide rates, and attitudes to gun
ownership (McAlister, 2001). - Honour cultures have higher rates of gun
ownership and interpersonal violence (Cohen,
1996). - Men (with guns) will often resist stronger gun
laws - USA forced removal of any reference to regulation
of civilian possession from the 2001 Program of
Action on The Illicit Trade of Small Arms in all
its Aspects - Many successful movements have been led by women
18IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
- Laws are only words on paper interpretation and
application is critical - VAW is under-reported
- Often law enforcement does not prioritize VAW
- Justice systems trivialize VAW
- Resources to address VAW are inadequate
- VAW laws are not always linked to gun laws
19Courts and Community based Policing
- Improve implementation of laws and procedures to
remove guns when there is a threat - Improve risk assessment DOES HE HAVE A GUN?
- Improve community/police relationships to
prioritize violence against women - Training for police, judges, physicians,
educators - Court watch accountability
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21CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
- Women are affected differently by firearms at
risk from intimate partners, cycle of violence
etc. - When firearms are accessible they are used in
violence against women (lethality) - Current constructions (conflict versus crime
military versus non) not meaningful - Regulation of civilian possession of firearms is
a critical to a global small arms strategy - Gender perspective is critical in addressing root
causes, conflict and crime, implementation
22Implications for Research
- Disaggregate data by gender
- Rates of murder with and without guns
- Review femicide case studies to understand risk
factors - Explore male/female attitudes to guns
- Interviews of abused women (and workers with
abused women) to understand the role of guns in
cycle of abuse - Explore threats to children in homes with guns
- Are children also killed with guns in the home?
- Examine murder/suicide
- Examine gun culture media discourse, etc.
- Examine application of laws and justice responses
23Implications for Policy
- Strong gun laws linked to domestic violence laws
- Improve laws and procedures to remove guns when
there is a threat - Improve risk assessment and interventions DOES
HE HAVE A GUN? - Improve community/police relationships to
prioritize violence against women - Training for police, judges, physicians,
educators - Understand link between attitudes to guns and
violence against women - More women in policy and research
- Analyse results of referendum
24Human Rights Obligations
- a State can be held complicit where it
condones a pattern of abuse through pervasive
non-action To avoid such complicity, States
must demonstrate due diligence by taking active
measures to protect, prosecute and punish private
actors who commit abuses - - Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women
(E/CN.4/1996/53)
25- There is no international right to bear arms
States which fail to implement effect regulation
of firearms may be failing their obligations
under international human rights law. - "there is also growing pressure to hold States
accountable for patterns of abuse, such as the
State's failure to establish reasonable
regulation regarding the private ownership of
small arms that are likely to be used in
homicides, suicides and accidents its failure to
protect individuals from a pattern of domestic
violence and its failure to protect individuals
from organized crimes including kidnapping and
killing for ransom". - - Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Small
Arms (E/CN.4/Sub.2/2002/39 5/ 2002) -