Title: Dia 1
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2INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCEInternational shifts
and trends
- Prof. Dr. Renée Römkens
- INTERVICT Universiteit Tilburg
3HISTORICAL SHIFTS IN CONCEPTUALIZATION OF
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
- politicization 1970s-1980s
- From the 1970s onwards ? from private issue to
public concern and regulation. - Womens movement as the engine of politicization
- Vision Re-conceptualization of private violence
as social problem and disproportionately
affecting women due to inequality between men
and women and cultural legitimizations - Strategy creating safety. Shelters/rape
crisis/self help initiatives - Political goal government should step in to a)
protect female citizens and b) sanction
perpetrators. Equal rights (to protection) and
equal treatment (of perpetrators of private and
public violence) as legal bases of government
intervention.
41970s-1980s contd
- Crucial role of social activist research and
literature in the 1970s initial process of social
change and consciousness raising. - Rape Susan Brownmiller (1974) Men, women and
rape - Wife abuse Erin Pizzey (1974) Scream quietly or
the neighbors will hear - Sexual abuse of girls Toni Morrison (1970), The
bluest eye. - Social scientific research
- kick-off 1980s to mid 1990s.
- International political and legal acknowledgment
- 1979 UN CEDAW ? (violence against women left out
as politically contested and too controversial to
include - 1992 General recommendation no. 19 on violence
against women as a form of discrimination. 1993
UN Declaration on violence against women (as a
violation of human rights) - Since 1994 Special UN Rapporteur on violence
against women.
5From violence against women to gender based
violence 1990s
- developing a complex and contextual gender
perspective (1990s). - Definition of gender as social construct (not
synonym with biological male or female) - Gender based violence going beyond violence of
men against women - Violence in the social context of unequal power
relationships between men and women - Violence that affects women disproportionately
- Racial/ethnic bias criticized (1990s). ?
intersectionality as concept to acknowledge
simultaneous intersecting axes of inequality
(class/race/gender/sexual orientation) - Impact globalisation (human trafficking,
migration cultural diversity in violent abuse)
6State of the art 1 research in IPV as booming
business
- General
- majority interdisciplinary, with recurring
developments towards mono-disciplinarity
(psychology) - impact globalisation
- 1. sociology/criminology/victimology
- Prevalence of victimization
- Correlates of victimization (social, economic,
cultural, psychological) - 2. (socio-)legal studies
- (national) generic criminal law abuse/assualt,
threat, rape, stalking, fgm, forced marriages,
trafficking for sexual purposes. - (national) special laws ( Spain gender based
violence, Sweden - (national) civil/admin. Law (injunction/eviction
order, barring order as in Austria, Germnay and
Netherlands) )
7State of the art 1 research in IPV as booming
business (contd)
- 2. (socio-)legal studies contd
- International human rights law
- UN CEDAW Optional Protocol Council of Europe
Rec. 2002 (5). - Under construction Council of Europe Convention
on Violence against women/domestic violence EU
preparatory work on European harmonisation of
legislastion on violence against women and
children). - criminal justic system/police studies
- 3. psychology (social psychology clinical
psychology) - Therapeutic interventions treatment evaluation
(victim, perpetrator) - Risk-assessment (risk of recidivism risk of
revictimization)
8State of the art 2 core research results on
prevalence of forms of intimate partner violence
- physical abuse
- women victimized by a male (ex-)partner 16-31
(average around 25 ). predominantly unilateral
and repeated violence that causes injuries. - men victimized by a female (ex-)partner 4-16
(wide range). predominantly incidental violence
and/or mutual violence mild or no physical
injuries. - rape of women by (ex-)partner 7-9
(conservative) - stalking by (ex-)partner 5-23. (Women
disproportionately affected2- 4 times as much as
men). - spouse killing Women disproportionately
affected. Separation violence.
9State of the art 3 trends in (governmental)
policy and interventions
- Extensive network of shelters for (female)
victims and children - Wide array of social work and/or therapeutic
interventions (victims, increasingly also for
perpetrators) - Increased efforts to professionalize police and
criminal justice response - Increased efforts to develop inter-
multidisciplinary collaboration - USA community based intervention
- Increased focus on legislation (criminalization)
- Implies a shift towards a focus on the
perpetrator - Fits in with crime control agenda
10After 2000 gender and ethnicity under debate
(policy and research)
- De-gendering (domestic violence as a gender
neutral and moral problem) - De-contextualization (severing from social
economic power differences and specific
gender-based ideological legacies). - intimate partner violence and the construction
of reciprocity/mutuality - Paradox while simultaneous broadening in
thematic scope it leads to a narrowing of
analytical perspective - Ethnicisation
- Selective foregrounding ethnic difference/othering
(in the North related to migration/growing
cultural diversity)
11 After 2000 criminalisation under debate
- EVIDENCE BASE LIMITED OR LACKING
- No preventive effect on perpetrators of
pro-arrest policies and pro-prosecution policies
towards perpetrators - Continuing evidence of resistance of the police
to intervene in IPV (private matter). - RISK OF DISEMPOWERMENT OF VICTIMS
- Individually criminal justice system
positioning victims in a marginal and non-agentic
position - Socially and culturally decline of trust in the
criminal legal system - OVERALL
- Undermining effect on multidisciplinary
intervention programs that focus on an integrated
approach. - Critique of limited understanding of gendered
nature of the problem
12IPV RESEARCH THEMATIC GAPS
- Prevalence of IPV
- Standardizing instruments that validly address
- unilateral and mutual violence (common couple
violence) - heterosexual and gay/lesbian couples
- differences in nature (physical and sexual
violence) - differences in severity
- social and personal correlates
- Intervention what works?
- Multidisciplinarity and the powers of law
13IPV RESEARCH theoretical and methodological
challenges
- CONTEXTUALITY maintaining a complex analysis of
IPV as a gender-based issue. Aim understanding
individual variation and heterogeneity in the
context of structural gender dynamics. - Legal research unmasking the gendered nature of
law in practice (vs. law on the books as
gender-neutral and hence objective). - Social research
- developing gender-sensitive data-collection
instruments. - theorizing the relationship between private and
public violence - INTERDISCIPLINARITY interdisciplinary analyses
aiming at providing that go beyond strictly
law/legal based interventions to develop an
integrated intervention approach (prevention,
protection and punishment). - HETEROGENEITY/DIVERSITY acknowledging cultural
differences yet avoid essentialization.