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History of Feminism
Related: About this forumWhat’s the link between feminist movements and Violence Against Women?
Theres a fascinating, brilliant and I think, very significant, piece on the role of feminism in driving action on violence against women in the latest issue of Gender and Development (ungated versions on Oxfam policy and practice website, please note).
Authors Laurel Weldon and Mala Htun have painstakingly constructed the mother of all databases, covering 70 countries over four decades (1975 to 2005). It includes various kinds of state action (legal and administrative reforms, protection and prevention, training for officials), and a number of other relevant factors, such as the presence of women legislators, GDP per capita, the nature of the political regime etc.
This allows them both to chart steady improvements in VaW policy (see maps at bottom of this piece) and to use stats techniques to try and identify those factors most closely correlated with state action. Heres what they find:
Countries with the strongest feminist movements tend, other things being equal, to have more comprehensive policies on violence against women than those with weaker or non-existent movements. This plays a more important role than left-wing parties, numbers of women legislators, or even national wealth.
These movements can make the difference between having a critical legal reform or funding for shelters or training for the police, and not having it . womens status agencies, international norms, and other factors further strengthen feminist efforts
Womens autonomous organising has played a critical role for three reasons. First, women organising as women generate social knowledge about womens position as a group in society. The problem of violence surfaces as an issue of primary concern when women come together to discuss their priorities as women.
Authors Laurel Weldon and Mala Htun have painstakingly constructed the mother of all databases, covering 70 countries over four decades (1975 to 2005). It includes various kinds of state action (legal and administrative reforms, protection and prevention, training for officials), and a number of other relevant factors, such as the presence of women legislators, GDP per capita, the nature of the political regime etc.
This allows them both to chart steady improvements in VaW policy (see maps at bottom of this piece) and to use stats techniques to try and identify those factors most closely correlated with state action. Heres what they find:
Countries with the strongest feminist movements tend, other things being equal, to have more comprehensive policies on violence against women than those with weaker or non-existent movements. This plays a more important role than left-wing parties, numbers of women legislators, or even national wealth.
These movements can make the difference between having a critical legal reform or funding for shelters or training for the police, and not having it . womens status agencies, international norms, and other factors further strengthen feminist efforts
Womens autonomous organising has played a critical role for three reasons. First, women organising as women generate social knowledge about womens position as a group in society. The problem of violence surfaces as an issue of primary concern when women come together to discuss their priorities as women.
http://www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p/?p=15541
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What’s the link between feminist movements and Violence Against Women? (Original Post)
ismnotwasm
Aug 2013
OP
Warpy
(111,174 posts)1. Violence against women is how the patriarchy enforces itself
They use it and have done so for millennia because it works.
But yes, organizing made us powerful enough to stand up and say we were sick of being beaten.
The amazing thing is that it came as a shock to a lot of men.
Excellent point.
Squinch
(50,922 posts)3. GREAT article!