The ANROWS Digital Library provides links to a broad range of evidence in the violence against women sector including research papers, reports and resources.

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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/11123
Record ID: 5ef136ad-88f1-406f-a34e-0a4a167ed469
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-955-720201030
Type: Book Chapter
Title: Gender-based Violence: Case Studies from the Global South
Other Titles: The Emerald Handbook of Feminism, Criminology and Social Change
Authors: Vitis, Laura
Fitz-Gibbon, Kate
Bull, Melissa
Carrington, Kerry
Walklate, Sandra
McCulloch, Jude
Maher, JaneMaree
Year: 2020
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Series/Report no.: The Emerald Handbook of Feminism, Criminology and Social Change
Notes: 

Abstract Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is a global policy issue with significant social, economic and personal consequences. The burden of VAWGs is distributed unequally, with rates of gender violence significantly higher in low- to middle-income countries of the Global South. Yet the bulk of global research on gender violence is based on the experiences of urban communities in high-income English-speaking countries mainly from the Global North. This body of research typically takes the experience of women from Anglophone countries as the norm from which to theorise and frame theories and research of gender-based violence. This chapter problematises theories that the privilege women in the Global North as the empirical referents of ‘everyday violence’ (Carrington et al., 2016). At the same time, however, it is important to resist homogenising the violence experienced by women across diverse societies in the Global South as oppressed subaltern Southern. This binary discourse exaggerates the differences and obfuscates the similarities of VAWG across Northern and Southern borders and reproduces images of women in the Global South as unfortunate victims of ‘other’ cultures (Durham, 2015; Narayan, 1997). This chapter contrasts three examples, the policing of family violence in Indigenous communities in Australia; Image-based Abuse in Singapore; and the policing of gender violence in the Pacific as a way of concretising the argument.

URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/11123
ISBN: 9781787699564
Appears in Collections:Book Chapters

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