121 |
Fathers in the frame: protecting children by including men in cases of violence against womenNavid, Carla 13 April 2009 (has links)
This thesis will uncover how law and policy, as well as how social workers speak to their practice, shape how the Manitoba child welfare system intervenes in cases of violence against mothers. By searching for the dominant themes of "invisible fathers" and "mothers failing to protect", this project substantiates how these themes contribute to the failure of the current system to hold the perpetrator accountable for his violence. I set out to confirm the argument that men need to be included as both risks and assets in the frame of our child welfare lens when assessing risk for children, in order to realize a feminist perspective in our work with families. Discourse analysis methods from a number of sources were drawn on to reveal and analyze how the discourse of "mothers failing to protect" has emerged, and how it informs child welfare practice and policy in ways that harm mothers and children. / May 2009
|
122 |
Social And Economic Resources And Physical Abuse Against Women By Their HusbandsHacioglu, Nilufer 01 December 2006 (has links) (PDF)
This study was undertaken with the objective of analysis of domestic violence against women by their husbands in terms of resource theory and its concepts. Domestic violence against women is a widespread social problem that can be observed in all societies. Studies on domestic violence in the past ten years were an important mechanism for bringing many women&rsquo / s experiences of discrimination and vulnerability to public attention.
According to resource theory, major sets of resources like economic variables, prestige, force, and kinship are significant factors to explain domestic violence against women. These resources are indicators of power and the lack of ability of men to reach these resources or women&rsquo / s ability to get these resources can affect power relations in the family and cause conflict.
|
123 |
Mäns våld mot kvinnor ur ett teoretiskt perspektivMårtensson, Ingrid January 2006 (has links)
<p>The essay begins by asserting that the theoretical approaches of men’s violence against women are just as important to study as its extent. The purpose is therefore to analyse and compare two theoretical approaches which is done by a comparative text analysis of two texts written on the subject. The essay attempts to answer two questions; what the theoretical approaches are and how they can be understood in light of feminist theory.</p><p>Previous research on men’s violence against women discuss especially three theoretical aspects. These are how the concept is defined, if the different forms of violence are being treated separately or not, and how it is explained. These aspects are used as the basis for the analysis which is conducted in two steps.</p><p>The result shows that the theoretical approaches analysed share many similarities with both each other and the feminist theory. All apply a broad definition, hold the different forms of violence together, and consider the most basic explanation for the violence to be the unequal power structure between the sexes. The biggest difference between the two theoretical approaches and the feminist theory is that the former also emphasizes other explanatory levels as well as the purely structural.</p>
|
124 |
Vilken roll spelar förvaltningens förståelse, kunskap och vilja för att genomföra beslut? : En jämförande fallstudie mellan Hässleholms och Landskrona Kommun gällande förstärkt stöd till våldsutsatta kvinnor och barn som bevittnar våldNilsson, Louise January 2009 (has links)
<p>The objective of this thesis was to investigate factors that influence local government implementation. The study is a comparative case study between two local governments in Sweden; Hässleholm and Landskrona. Primarily the thesis aimed to look at the conditions faced by those implementing a new government directive aimed at supporting women who face violence, and their children who bear witness, by focusing on three key aspects for successful implementation: Implementers level of understanding, knowledge and will to implement decisions. Material in the form of documents and 14 interviews with key actors in the two authorities constitute the empirical foundation of the analysis. According to the results, are the two local governments pretty equal in achieving their projectgoal but the local government of Hässleholm had better policy-making, policy-design and policy process. This difference in outcome between the two authorities could not fully be explained by the three investigated dimensions since the difference between the two authorities were rather limited in this respect: both authorities scored quite high on implementers understanding, knowledge and will to implement decisions. This does not say that understanding, knowledge and will are not important factors, rather it shows that also other factors can affect the outcome.</p>
|
125 |
A process of change: abused women's decision to stay in or leave their abusive relationshipsWong, Yuen-ha., 黃婉霞 January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Nursing Studies / Master / Master of Nursing in Advanced Practice
|
126 |
Women survivors of intimate partner violence: reducing depressive symptoms and promoting safety behavioursWong, Yuen-ha., 黃婉霞 January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Nursing Studies / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
|
127 |
Gender ideology, microcredit participation and marital violence against women in rural BangladeshKarim, K.M. Rabiul. January 2011 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work and Social Administration / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
|
128 |
Problematizing discourses of feminicide in Guatemala : feminist universalism, neoliberal subject formation and hypervisibilityIhmoud, Sarah Emily 13 July 2011 (has links)
In this report I argue that the analytical unit of feminicide must be expanded beyond gender in order to assess the axis of inequality upon which gender violence in
contemporary Guatemala is being waged. Intersectionality and a gendered racial
formation theory provide a more nuanced basis from which to undertake an analysis of
gender violence and feminicide, and the grounds for devising effective long-term strategies for ending violence in its myriad forms. Second, I argue that the increased
visibility of feminicide of late in Guatemala, far from being evidence of gradual progress
toward addressing the problem, should be read as a sign of the problem‘s deepening, in a
new and perhaps exacerbated form. Using historical examples from the Guatemalan
women‘s movement, I demonstrate that demands to end gender violence and increase the
rights of women, when articulated by the state, have often led not to a diminishing, but a
reshaping of patriarchy and other forms of oppression. The Guatemalan state‘s transition
towards neoliberal governmentality, and the gendered subject formation that is a part of
this process, raise additional contradictions that merit further attention. State-based
approaches to women‘s rights and protection should be merely one element of a larger
political strategy towards more radical transformations of the state and racial, social and
economic inequalities that will end gender based violence in the long-term. / text
|
129 |
Smurto prieš vaikus priežasčių ir pasekmių analizė / Analysis of the reasons and outcomes of the violence against childrenVaškelienė, Regina 03 July 2006 (has links)
Research object: violence against children. Research objective: to discuss the notion of crime victim, to assess crime emergence and its outcomes of children psychosocial development, as well as to investigate children attitude towards crime Tasks: 1. To find out the crime circumstances and issues that children deal with both at school and outside it. 2. To analyse the children attitude towards their safety at school and outside it. 3. To establish the reasons of crime that leads to children’s hospitalization. 4. To find out what emotional suffering children face after they have experienced crime. 5. To investigate where children affected by crime go for help. Research methods: • Questionnaire • Interview methodology • Case analysis Inferences: The study shows that girls are more often affected by emotional violence when boys – by physical crime. Research results demonstrate that children are more often affected by violence in families addicted to alcohol drinking. The study had showed that children prefer to seek for help at the social pedagogue and less often – at the psychologist or the class educator, what draws inference that the social padagogue at school is more and more confidenced and trusted by children.
|
130 |
Stone Bodies in the City: Unmapping Monuments, Memory, and Belonging in OttawaDavidson, Tonya Katherine Unknown Date
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.0468 seconds