Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue

Since violence against women in the family has been made public by the international women’s movement beginning in the 1970ies in Western States and after 1989 also in Eastern Europe a rapidly growing number of institutions and networks emerged. There exists a growing number of networks on the l...

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Main Author: Margrit Brückner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Work & Society 2006-01-01
Series:Social Work and Society
Online Access:https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/177
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author Margrit Brückner
author_facet Margrit Brückner
author_sort Margrit Brückner
collection DOAJ
description Since violence against women in the family has been made public by the international women’s movement beginning in the 1970ies in Western States and after 1989 also in Eastern Europe a rapidly growing number of institutions and networks emerged. There exists a growing number of networks on the level of the European Union, which supports the anti violence work and research on this topic. About 30 years of research mainly in Western post-industrial societies show that in the analysis of violence towards women it is important to differentiate between culturally induced individual (or group) oppression by men and the way this is made possible by societal structures based on gender inequality. Therefore hierarchical family relations and personal behavior of men are one aspect to look at, the structural societal set-up the other. The extent of gender-specific violence can be interpreted as an extreme consequence of the hierarchical construction of gender relations, which seem to justify a personal and sexual subjugation of women and in the extreme even violence towards women. Without this structural component individual violence would not all together fade away, but would lose its societal and cultural back-up. Cross-cultural studies show the interconnection between a comparatively equal gender structure and little gender and generation violence and vice versa. The complexity of gender violence makes a theoretical position necessary which analyzes individual aggression (mostly male) and individual suffering from violence (mostly female) - often over many years - on the background of structural and cultural conditions including the multifaceted connections and breaks between these backgrounds and personal social practices.
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spelling doaj.art-e641b5a249b94ec2b13754391c02ec9b2022-12-21T21:30:52ZengSocial Work & SocietySocial Work and Society1613-89532006-01-0141Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International IssueMargrit BrücknerSince violence against women in the family has been made public by the international women’s movement beginning in the 1970ies in Western States and after 1989 also in Eastern Europe a rapidly growing number of institutions and networks emerged. There exists a growing number of networks on the level of the European Union, which supports the anti violence work and research on this topic. About 30 years of research mainly in Western post-industrial societies show that in the analysis of violence towards women it is important to differentiate between culturally induced individual (or group) oppression by men and the way this is made possible by societal structures based on gender inequality. Therefore hierarchical family relations and personal behavior of men are one aspect to look at, the structural societal set-up the other. The extent of gender-specific violence can be interpreted as an extreme consequence of the hierarchical construction of gender relations, which seem to justify a personal and sexual subjugation of women and in the extreme even violence towards women. Without this structural component individual violence would not all together fade away, but would lose its societal and cultural back-up. Cross-cultural studies show the interconnection between a comparatively equal gender structure and little gender and generation violence and vice versa. The complexity of gender violence makes a theoretical position necessary which analyzes individual aggression (mostly male) and individual suffering from violence (mostly female) - often over many years - on the background of structural and cultural conditions including the multifaceted connections and breaks between these backgrounds and personal social practices.https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/177
spellingShingle Margrit Brückner
Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
Social Work and Society
title Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
title_full Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
title_fullStr Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
title_full_unstemmed Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
title_short Domestic Violence: Local Activities - International Issue
title_sort domestic violence local activities international issue
url https://ejournals.bib.uni-wuppertal.de/index.php/sws/article/view/177
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