Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22263
Record ID: 15ac8229-b51c-417e-96a7-6a34c5ddc1ea
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/13576275.2022.2155509
Type: Journal Article
Title: Cause of death: Femicide
Authors: Walklate, Sandra
Fitz-Gibbon, Kate
Keywords: Femicide
Categories: ANROWS e-newsletter February 2023
Year: 2023
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Online
Abstract:  Labelled ‘the shadow pandemic’ by UN Women, violence against women received considerable global public attention during 2020–21. Underpinning this moment of public concern, there lies a substantial history of efforts to document the nature of, and campaign against, the extent of violence against women globally. This is also the case in relation to femicide. Whilst we recognise that this is a contested term, for the purposes of this paper we use femicide to refer to the killing of women and girls because they are female by male violence. Femicide, as a death to be specifically counted in law only exists in a small number of jurisdictions. Where it is so recognised, primarily in South American countries as feminicidio, such deaths represent only the tip of the iceberg of such killings globally. This paper, in drawing on empirical data from a range of different sources (including administrative data, media analysis, and Femicide Observatory data) gathered throughout 2020, considers: what it means to call a death femicide, what implications might follow if all the deaths of women at the hands of men were counted as femicide, and the extent to which extraordinary times have any bearing on this kind of ordinary death.
Notes: 

Open access

URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/22263
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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