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Motivations, opportunities and constraints: voluntary labour in women's refuges and crisis centres
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 09:57 authored by Lesley McMillanThe feminist movement of the 1960s and '70s made the claim that 'the personal is political' and demanded a re-examination of women's daily lives. More specifically where violence was concerned, the movement demanded that domestic violence no longer be considered something that women were responsible for, and that rape and sexual assault no longer be viewed as a sex crime with women partly to blame (Amir, 1971). Rather, the women's movement asserted that power was a central issue in violence against women and that sexual and domestic violence both reflect and determine gendered social structures. The distinction between the public and the private was challenged as well as the conduct of agencies in relation to sexual assault survivors and the reluctance of state agencies to intervene in 'domestic' situations. The movement aimed to have the under-reporting and high prevalence of male violence against women recognised, along with the acknowledgement that it can affect women at any stage of their lives and take many forms including: physical; psychological; economic; and/or sexual abuse. Overall, the aim was to have violence redefined as an issue of power that is both caused by and perpetuates gender inequality, recognising its systemic nature and pervasiveness and working to achieve an end to this violence. The feminist response took two forms: political campaigning and alternative welfare provision in the form of refuges and crisis centres.
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Publication status
- Published
Journal
Meddelanden från Socialhögskolan (Social Consequences of Changing Labour Market Conditions and Undeserved Personal Virtues: Lectures on age, class, ethnicity and gender)ISSN
0282-6143Publisher
Socialhögskolan (Lunds Universitet)Issue
4Volume
2003Page range
78-89Pages
91.0Place of publication
LundDepartment affiliated with
- Sociology and Criminology Publications
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- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Editors
L HarryssonLegacy Posted Date
2012-02-06Usage metrics
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