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Families and Violence

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Title: Families and Violence


1
Families and Violence
  • Domestic Violence
  • Marital Rape

2
  • Domestic violence is the leading cause of injury
    to women between ages 15 and 44 in the United
    States - more than car accidents, muggings, and
    rapes combined.

3
The Problem
  • Every 9 seconds a women is beaten in the United
    States.  
  • Between 3 and 4 million women are battered each
    year.
  • 85-95 of all domestic violence victims are
    female.
  • Women age 20 - 34 endure the highest rates of
    domestic violence.
  •  Domestic violence is the leading cause of injury
    to women.

4
The Problem (Cont.)
  • Although only 572,000 reports of assault by
    intimates are officially reported to federal
    officials each year, the most conservative
    estimates indicate two to four million women of
    all races and classes are battered each year. At
    least 170,000 of those violent incidents are
    serious enough to require hospitalization,
    emergency room care or a doctor's attention.

5
  • Women of all cultures, races, occupations, income
    levels, and ages are battered - by husbands,
    boyfriends, lovers, and partners. (Surgeon
    General Antonia Novello, as quoted in Domestic
    Violence Battered Women, publication of the
    Reference Department of the Cambridge Public
    Library, Cambridge, MA)

6
Relations of Privilege Within Families-
  • Violence as a means of social control
  • Violence as a reassertion of privilege
  • Violence as entitlement
  • Violence and masculinity

7
Understanding Family Violence-The Gender Component
  • Men's violence against women and children is the
    most common form of domestic violence in American
    society.
  • Men assaulting their women partners comprise
    between 86 and 98 of family violence-related
    arrests.
  • About 1/3 of women report being the victims of
    domestic violence

8
Violence and Masculinity The Triad of Mens
Violence (Kaufman)
  • 1) Violence Against Women
  • 2) Violence Against Other Men
  • 3) Violence Against the Self
  • Mens Violence reinforces domination over women.
  • Masculinity is fragile. With it comes privilege.
    Violence sustains and bolsters these privileges.

9
Victimization and Gender
  • Over two-thirds of violent victimizations against
    women were committed by someone known to them
  • 31 of female victims reported that the offender
    was a stranger.
  • Approximately 28 were intimates such as husbands
    or boyfriends
  • 35 were acquaintances
  • The remaining 5 were other relatives.
  • In contrast, victimizations by intimates and
    other relatives accounted for only 5 of all
    violent victimizations against men.
  • Men were significantly more likely to have been
    victimized by acquaintances (50) or strangers
    (44) than by intimates or other relatives.)
  • (Ronet Bachman Ph.D., U.S. Department of Justice
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, "Violence Against
    Women A National Crime Victimization Survey
    Report," January 1994, p. 1)

10
  • Annually, compared to males, females experienced
    over 10 times as many incidents of violence by an
    intimate.
  • On average each year, women experienced 572,032
    violent victimizations at the hands of an
    intimate, compared to 48,983 incidents committed
    against men. (Ronet Bachman Ph.D., U.S.
    Department of Justice Bureau of Justice
    Statistics, "Violence Against Women A National
    Crime Victimization Survey Report," January 1994,
    p. 6)

11
  • Every day four women die in this country as a
    result of domestic violence, the euphemism for
    murders and assaults by husbands and boyfriends.
    According to the FBI, approximately 1,400 women a
    year are murdered by husbands or boyfriends.

12
How Do Gender Scripts Contribute to Domestic
Violence
  • How do enactments of masculinity and femininity
    contribute to domestic violence?
  • How do attitudes about gender contribute to the
    problem?
  • How do cultural attitudes regarding families
    contribute to the problem?

13
Women and Children
  • The 1996 New Zealand Government Statement on
    Family Violence recognizes that "There are
    significant links between violence against women
    and abuse of children. One of the most common
    contexts of child abuse is a situation where a
    child's mother is being beaten by her male
    partner."

14
The Impact on Children
  • It is estimated that annually, 3.3 Million
    children witness the abuse their mother or female
    care-taker.
  • Violent juvenile offenders are four times more
    likely to have grown up in homes where they saw
    violence.
  • Children who have witnessed violence at home are
    also five times more likely to commit or suffer
    violence when they become adults.

15
The Victims
  • Women are 10 times more likely than men to be
    victimized by an intimate.
  • Young women, women who are separated, divorced or
    single, low- income women and African-American
    women are disproportionately victims of assault
    and rape.
  • Violent attacks on lesbians and gay men have
    become two to three times more common than they
    were prior to 1988.
  • An average of 28 of high school and college
    students experience dating violence at some point.

16
Pregnancy and Domestic Violence
  • 26 of pregnant teens reported being physically
    abused by their boyfriends -- about half of them
    said the battering began or intensified after he
    learned of her pregnancy.

17
Health and Domestic Violence
  • Women who are battered have more than twice the
    health care needs and costs than those who are
    never battered.
  • Approximately 17 percent of pregnant women report
    having been battered, and the results include
    miscarriages, stillbirths and a two to four times
    greater likelihood of bearing a low birth weight
    baby.
  • Abused women are disproportionately represented
    among the homeless and suicide victims.
  • In some cases, victims of domestic violence are
    being denied insurance in some states because
    they are considered to have a "pre-existing
    condition."

18
Costs to Businesses
  • Each year, medical expenses from domestic
    violence total at least 3 to 5 billion.
    Businesses forfeit another 100 million in lost
    wages, sick leave, absenteeism and
    non-productivity. (Domestic Violence for Health
    Care Providers, 3rd Edition, Colorado Domestic
    Violence Coalition, 1991.)
  • It is estimated that 25 of workplace problems
    such as absenteeism, lower productivity, turnover
    and excessive use of medical benefits are due to
    family violence. (Employee Assistance
    Providers/MN)

19
Of Victims of Domestic Violence
  • 96 experience problems at work due to abuse  
  • 74 are harassed while at work by their abuser
  • 56 are late to work
  • 28 leave work early
  • 54 miss entire days of work

20
Is Income a Factor?
  • Domestic violence rates are five times higher
    among families below poverty levels.
  • Severe spouse abuse is twice as likely to be
    committed by unemployed men as by those working
    full time.

21
What Does this Tell Us About Domestic Violence
  • Stress is a factor
  • Financial Security is an insulator

22
Class Does Insulate, But it Allows Escape
  • Violence is the reason stated for divorce in 22
    of middle-class marriages. (EAP Digest
    November/December 1991)

23
Challenge to the Class
  • From 1983 to 1991, the number of domestic
    violence reports received increased by almost
    117. (NYS Division of Criminal Justice Services,
    1983 and 1991)
  • How would you explain this?

24
Child Abuse and Neglect
  • In 2001, approximately 903,000 children were
    found to be victims of child maltreatment.
  • More than half of child victims (57 percent)
    suffered neglect.
  • Approximately 1,300 children died of abuse or
    neglect during the year 2001, a rate of 1.81
    children per 100,000 children in the population.

25
  • In the adult retrospective study, victimization
    was reported by 27 percent of the women and 16
    percent of the men.
  • The median age for the occurrence of reported
    abuse was 9.9 for boys and 9.6 for girls.
  • Victimization occurred before age eight for 22
    percent of boys and for 23 percent of girls.
  • Most of the abuse of both boys and girls was by
    offenders 10 or more years older than their
    victims.
  • Girls were more likely than boys to disclose the
    abuse.
  • Forty-two percent of the women and thirty-three
    percent of the men reported never having
    disclosed the experience to anyone.Source
    Finkelhor et al., 1990.

26
Sexual Assault
  • Every year approximately 132,000 women report
    that they have been victims of rape or attempted
    rape, and more than half of them knew their
    attackers.
  • It's estimated that two to six times that many
    women are raped, but do not report it.
  • Every year 1.2 million women are forcibly raped
    by their current or former male partners, some
    more than once.

27
Marital Rape
  • Approximately 28 of victims are raped by
    husbands or boyfriends, 35 by acquaintances, and
    5 by other relatives. (Violence against Women,
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dept. of
    Justice, 1994)
  • Approximately 1,555,600 adult American Women have
    been victims of one or more forcible rapes by
    their husbands. (Crime Victims Research and
    Treatment Center, 1992)

28
The Under-Report of Sexual Assaults
  • 90 of sexual assault victims who knew their
    attacker did not report the attack to the police
    (Bohmer, C. Parrot, A. Sexual Assault on
    Campus. Lexington Books New York, p. 31, 1993)

29
Vulnerability
  • Persons with disabilities are at 1.5 to 5 times
    the risk of sexual abuse and assault as are
    members of the general population (Sobsey, Dick,
    R.N. Ed.D., Violence and Abuse in the Lives of
    People with Disabilities The End of Silent
    Acceptance? p. 52, 1994)

30
Childhood Sexual Abuse
  • Family violence and abuse are among the most
    prevalent forms of interpersonal violence against
    women and young children -- both boys and girls.
    The sexual abuse of a child should never be "just
    a family matter," but many children are afraid to
    report an incident to the police because the
    abusers are too often a family friend or
    relative.
  • Approximately one-third of all juvenile victims
    of sexual abuse cases are children younger than 6
    years of age. (Violence and the Family, Report of
    the American Psychological Association
    Presidential Task Force on Violence and the
    Family, 1996.)
  • According to the Justice Department, one in two
    rape victims are under age 18 one in six are
    under age 12. (Child Rape Victims, 1992. U.S.
    Department of Justice.)

31
  • Risk factors for perpetrating sexual violence
    include early sexual experience (both forced and
    voluntary), adherence by men to sex role
    stereotyping, negative attitudes of men towards
    women, alcohol consumption, acceptance of rape
    myths by men.

32
The Abuse Prostitution Connection
  • Men and women who were raped or forced into
    sexual activity as children or adolescents were
    four times more likely to work in prostitution
    compared with non-victims (Population Reports
    Ending Violence Against Women, 2000)
  • 57 of prostitutes reported being sexually
    assaulted as children (Farley, Melissa Barkan,
    Howard. "Prostitution, Violence Against Women,
    and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder." Women
    Health 27(3) 37-49. 1998)
  • Children who are sexually abused are 27.7 times
    more likely than non-victims to be arrested for
    prostitution as adults (Wisdom, C. Victims of
    Childhood Sexual Abuse Later Criminal
    Consequences. Washington D.C. U.S. Department of
    Justice, National Institute of Justice, 1995)

33
Peggy Sanday- Rape Culture
  • Rape cultures share three common ideologies
  • Male Dominance
  • Competitive Hierarchy
  • Violence

34
Sexual Violence Rape Culture
  • Characteristics of a Rape Culture (Peggy Sanday)
  • Male Dominance
  • Gender Segregation
  • Violence

35
Solutions For Change
  • What do you propose?
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