771 resultados para Homophobic violence
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This research examines links between intimacy and violence within the transference relationship of a three year old boy during intensive psychotherapy. Psychoanalytic clinical findings are used to examine triggers to violence that initially appeared to link with moments of emotional warmth. The research uses a retrospective single case study design. The clinical data cover a period of transition in the child's life from being a 'looked after child' in foster care to being adopted. There was a history of early trauma from neglect and domestic abuse. Clinical process notes from supervised sessions were coded using an adapted grounded theory approach to reveal complex interlinking themes of intimacy, violence, Oedipal issues, control and difficulties regulating affect. Data in this study show how intimacy and violence are linked when there is evidence of a separation between the self and the object of intimacy. Explosive violence is triggered by the threat of loss of the object and the rage is, at times directed towards the object of intimacy. The findings of this study support concepts identified by earlier research in the field about the impact of a lack of maternal containment on innate violence, associated struggles with the Oedipal complex and the impact upon the capacity for symbol formation and thinking. However, the research findings challenge Glasser's (1979) theory of the 'core complex' that suggests that intimacy triggers violence. The results of this research indicate that it is the threat to the loss of intimacy as a result of separation from the object that is the trigger to violence. I believe this study may, in a modest way, further understanding about links between violence and intimacy in human relationships. This may help other child psychotherapists be alert to certain dangers when dealing with violence in the therapy room.
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Aim and Objective In this qualitative study we explored women’s pregnancy intentions and experiences of intimate partner violence before, during and after pregnancy. Background Unintended pregnancies in the context of intimate partner violence can have serious health, social and economic consequences for women and their children. Design Feminist and phenomenological philosophies underpinned the study to gain a richer understanding of women’s experiences. Methods Eleven women who had been pregnant in the previous two years were recruited from community-based women’s refuges in one region of the United Kingdom. Of the eleven women, eight had unplanned pregnancies, two reported being coerced into early motherhood, and only one woman had purposively planned her pregnancy. Multiple in-depth interviews focused on participants’ accounts of living with intimate partner violence. Experiential data analysis was used to identify, analyse and highlight themes. Results Three major themes were identified: men’s control of contraception, partner’s indiscriminate response to the pregnancy, and women’s mixed feelings about the pregnancy. Participants reported limited influence over their sexual relationship and Accepted Article This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. birth control. Feelings of vulnerability about themselves and fear for their unborn babies’ safety were intensified by their partners’ continued violence during pregnancy. Conclusion Women experiencing intimate partner violence were more likely to have an unintended pregnancy. This could be attributed to male dominance and fear, which impacts on a woman’s ability to manage her birth control options. The women’s initial excitement about their pregnancy diminished in the face of uncertainty and ongoing violence within their relationship. Relevance to clinical practice Women experiencing violence lack choice in relation to birth control options leading to unintended pregnancies. Interpreting the findings from the victim-perpetrator interactive spin theory of intimate partner violence provides a possible framework for midwives and nurses to better understand and respond to women’s experiences of violence during pregnancy.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2016-08
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Cette recherche porte sur l'évaluation des effets d'un programme de prévention primaire de la violence dans les relations amoureuses auprès des adolescents d'une école secondaire de l'Outaouais. Un échantillon de 162 élèves de troisième et quatrième secondaire a participé à la recherche: 76 sujets du groupe expérimental ont été soumis à la formule courte du programme V.I.R.A.J. (Violence dans les Relations Amoureuses des Jeunes) et 86 autres sujets ont constitué le groupe contrôle. Les résultats obtenus indiquent la présence de progrès significatifs dans le groupe expérimental, sur le plan des connaissances, de même que des différences significatives entre les garçons et les filles sur le plan des attitudes égalitaires, contrôlantes et des connaissances. Malgré une prédominance de la violence verbale, les résultats montrent aussi que la violence dans les fréquentations amoureuses des adolescents est aussi présente sous ses autres formes (psychologique et physique). Certaines différences liées au fait que l'on ait émis, subi ou observé des comportements de violence (verbale, psychologique et physique) suggèrent que l'on est beaucoup plus témoin de violence, et cela sous toutes ses formes, que victimes ou agresseurs. Ces résultats indiquent aussi que les filles rapportent être davantage témoins que les garçons de violence verbale et psychologique.
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On entend souvent affirmer que l'agressivité et la violence s'amplifient de nos jours. Comme la plupart des sociétés modernes, le Québec n'échappe pas à la recrudescence de la violence sous toutes ses formes. Ses manifestations sont de plus en plus fréquentes et elles affectent l'éducation dès l'école primaire. À l'école De La Chanterelle, où je suis directrice, notre milieu scolaire (parents, professeurs et direction) s'inquiète depuis quelques temps des différentes manifestations de violence observables dans nos murs. Les explications de ce phénomène demeurent confuses et parfois contradictoires et de là les solutions difficiles à trouver. Par ailleurs, selon Jean-Marc Domenach, l'agressivité et la violence dans le milieu scolaire ne seraient pas plus grave aujourd'hui qu'autrefois. "La condition humaine en a toujours été une de violence. Ce qu'il y a de nouveau, c'est qu'on cherche aujourd'hui une racine commune aux manifestations de violence. La conscience de la violence, l’intolérance de la violence sont des phénomènes récents". […]
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Research on the cognitive and decision-making processes of individuals who choose to engage in ideologically based violence is vital. Our research examines how abstract and concrete construal mindsets affect likelihood to engage in ideologically based violence. Construal Level Theory (CLT) states that an abstract mindset (high-level construal), as opposed to a concrete mindset (low-level construal), is associated with a greater likelihood of engaging in goal-oriented, value-motivated behaviors. Assuming that ideologically based violence is goal-oriented, we hypothesized that high-level construal should result in an increased likelihood of engaging in ideologically based violence. In the pilot study we developed and tested 24 vignettes covering controversial topics and assessed them on features such as relatability, emotional impact, and capacity to elicit a violent reaction. The ten most impactful vignettes were selected for use in the primary investigations. The two primary investigations examined the effect of high- and low-level construal manipulations on self-reported likelihood of engaging in ideologically based violence. Self-reported willingness was measured through an ideological violence assessment. Data trends implied that participants were engaged in the study, as they reported a higher willingness to engage in ideologically based violence when they had a higher passion for the vignette's social issue topic. Our results did not indicate a significant relationship between construal manipulations and level of passion for a topic.
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This essay began as a hybrid critical/creative paper that was presented as part of an all-female panel discussing the intersections between writing and extreme violence. My own paper was on the relationship between my creative nonfiction novel The Museum of Atheism and the real life murder of six-year-old beauty queen, JonBenet Ramsey. This essay is an attempt to represent the writing process of the creative nonfiction author, and to consider the ways in which critical theory can be used to highlight, or conversely obscure, fictional writing. In addition to considering the effect of using a real story, a true crime, as the basis for a semi-fictional work, this essay will also consider the relationship I had as a writer to my publisher, editor and agent, and their interventions in the writing process to ensure that facts were deliberately skewed or warped in order to avoid litigation. Finally, I will consider my own relationship to the material, and the impact that this had on the writing process.
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When Kate and Laura Mulleavy of Rodarte worked with MAC to create their Autumn/Winter 2010 makeup collection and based their ideas on the murdered women of Ciudad Juarez, there was a public and industry outcry which led to the withdrawal of cosmetics with names such as ‘Factory’ ‘Juarez’ and ‘Ghost Town’. Rodarte tapped into the borderland mythologies of Juarez and crated an illusory fantasy world which sought to simultaneously obliterate and venerate the dead women. One eyeshadow, ‘Bordertown’, appears to look like chunks of rotting flesh streaked with blood. The models for their catwalk show had hollow blackened eyes, green-white pallor and lips that had been bloodlessly ‘lip-erased’ with a product specifically designed for the purpose. In Spanish, maquillar is to make up, to assemble. The women in the factories are asked to repeat simple mechanical operations thousands of times a day to make up the products which will be sold by global corporations. At the same time their images are being assembled, made up and aestheticized to create a cosmetic erasure of the crimes which they are subject to. When two American women and a global company make profit from this dangerous cosmetic erasure in order to sell products, the borders between bodies, countries, art and crime become leaky through the act and the illusion of symbiosis between the women of Ciudad Juarez and the products they inspired is threatened by the haunting of exploitation. Since then, the situation has become more complex. Chris Brown got a neck tattoo, based, he says, on the promotional material produced by MAC for the Rodarte sisters campaign. The image, which is of a skull, bears a striking resemblance to the police photographs of his ex, and now current, girlfriend, superstar Rihanna. The controversy over gendered violence, race and exploitation, begun by Rodarte and MAC, came back, haunting, once again. This paper seeks to address these connections, and ask what happens when domestic violence collides with globalism, fashion and murder.
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The goal of this study was to understand how and whether policy and practice relating to violence against women in Uganda, especially Uganda’s Domestic Violence Act of 2010, have had an effect on women’s beliefs and practices, as well as on support and justice for women who experience abuse by their male partners. Research used multi-sited ethnography at transnational, national, and local levels to understand the context that affects what policies are developed, how they are implemented, and how, and whether, women benefit from these. Ethnography within a local community situated global and national dynamics within the lives of women. Women who experience VAW within their intimate partnerships in Uganda confront a political economy that undermines their access to justice, even as a women’s rights agenda is working to develop and implement laws, policies, and interventions that promote gender equality and women’s empowerment. This dissertation provides insights into the daily struggles of women who try to utilize policy that challenges duty bearers, in part because it is a new law, but also because it conflicts with the structural patriarchy that is engrained in Ugandan society. Two explanatory models were developed. One explains factors relating to a woman’s decision to seek support or to report domestic violence. The second explains why women do and do not report DV. Among the findings is that a woman is most likely to report abuse under the following circumstances: 1) her own, or her children’s survival (physical or economic) is severely threatened; 2) she experiences severe physical abuse; or, 3) she needs financial support for her children. Research highlights three supportive factors for women who persist in reporting DV. These are: 1) the presence of an “advocate” or support 2) belief that reporting will be helpful; and, 3) lack of interest in returning to the relationship. This dissertation speaks to the role that anthropologists can play in a multi-disciplinary approach to a complex issue. This role is understanding – deeply and holistically; and, articulating knowledge generated locally that provides connections between what happens at global, national and local levels.
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When we take a step back from the imposing figure of physical violence, it becomes possible to examine other structurally violent forces that constantly shape our cultural and political landscapes. One of the driving interests in the “turn to Paul” in recent continental philosophy stems from wrestling with questions about the real nature of contemporary violence. Paul is positioned as a thinker whose messianic experience began to cut through the violent masquerade of the existing order. The crucifixion and resurrection of the Messiah (a slave and a God co-existing in one body) exposed the empty grounding upon which power resided. The Christ-event signifies a moment of violent interruption in the existing order which Paul enjoins the Gentiles to participate in through a dedication of love for the neighbour. This divine violence aims to reveal and subvert the “powers,” epitomised in the Roman Empire, in order to fulfil the labour of the Messianic now-time which had arrived. The impetus behind this research comes from a typically enigmatic and provocative section of text by the Slovene philosopher, cultural critic, and Christian atheist Slavoj Žižek. He claims that 'the notion of love should be given here all its Paulinian weight: the domain of pure violence… is the domain of love' (2008a, 173). In this move he links Paul’s idea of love to that of Walter Benjamin’s divine violence; the sublime and the cataclysmic come together in this seemingly perverse notion. At stake here is the way in which uncovering violent forces in the “zero-level” of our narrative worldviews aids the diagnosis of contemporary political and ethical issues. It is not enough to imagine Paul’s encounter with the Christ-event as non-violent. This Jewish apocalyptic movement was engaged in a violent struggle within an existing order that God’s wrath will soon dismantle. Paul’s weak violence, inspired by his fidelity to the Christ-event, places all responsibility over creation in the role of the individual within the collective body. The centre piece of this re-imagined construction of the Pauline narrative comes in Romans 13: the violent dedication to love understood in the radical nature of the now-time. 3 This research examines the role that narratives play in the creation and diagnosis of these violent forces. In order to construct a new genealogy of violence in Christianity it is crucial to understand the role of the slave of Christ (the revolutionary messianic subject). This turn in the Symbolic is examined through creating a literary structure in which we can approach a radical Nietzschean shift in Pauline thought. The claim here, a claim which is also central to Paul’s letters, is that when the symbolic violence which manipulates our worldviews is undone by a divine violence, if even for a moment, new possibilities are created in the opening for a transvaluation of values. Through this we uncover the nature of original sin: the consequences of the interconnected reality of our actions. The role of literature is vital in the construction of this narrative; starting with Cormac McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men, and continuing through works such as Melville’s Bartleby the Scrivener, this thesis draws upon the power of literature in the shaping of our narrative worlds. Typical of the continental philosophy at the heart of this work, a diverse range of illustrations and inspirations from fiction is pulled into its narrative to reflect the symbolic universe that this work was forged through. What this work attempts to do is give this theory a greater grounding in Paul’s letters by demonstrating this radical kenotic power at the heart of the Christ-event. Romans 13 reveals, in a way that has not yet been picked up by Critchley, Žižek, and others, that Paul opposed the biopolitical power of the Roman Empire through the weak violence of love that is the labour of the slaves of Christ on the “now-time” that had arrived.
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La violence conjugale est un problème social qui engendre des coûts sérieux (Statistique Canada, 2016). Son traitement est important. Les taux d’abandon thérapeutique observés dans les programmes de traitement en groupe pour les hommes auteurs de comportements violents en contexte conjugal se situent entre 15 et 58 % (Jewell & Wormith, 2010). Ces hauts taux d’abandon réduisent l’efficacité réelle des suivis pour violence conjugale (Bowen & Gilchrist, 2006). Des études montrent que l’âge, l’occupation, le statut conjugal, le faible revenu, l’expérience de violence physique à l’enfance, la consommation de drogue et d’alcool, ainsi que la personnalité colérique et la fréquence des comportements de violence sont des variables qui permettent de prédire l’abandon d’un programme de traitement de la violence conjugale en format de groupe et de type fermé (Jewell & Wormith, 2010). Aucune étude recensée n’a étudié les prédicteurs liés à l’abandon thérapeutique d’un traitement en format individuel de type ouvert. Cette étude visait à identifier quels sont les moments-clés où il y a cessation du suivi pour violence conjugale et à vérifier quelles variables sont associées à une cessation plus ou moins précoce du traitement individuel des hommes auteurs de violence conjugale. Une batterie de questionnaires auto-rapportés a été soumise à 206 hommes francophones qui amorcent une consultation individuelle pour un problème de violence conjugale dans un centre communautaire de la province de Québec. Parmi ceux-ci se trouvaient des questionnaires évaluant l’expérience de la colère, les comportements de violence conjugale, les insécurités d’attachement amoureux et la désirabilité sociable. Le nombre de séances complétées par chaque participant a également été obtenu par le biais de l’organisme. Une première analyse de survie a permis de produire une table de survie et d’identifier trois moments où la cessation du suivi est la plus fréquente, soient une cessation précoce (1 ou 2 séances), une cessation à court terme (3 à 5 séances) et une cessation à moyen terme (après la 11e séance). L’analyse de survie par régression de Cox a ensuite permis de montrer que l’âge, le fait d’avoir complété ou non des études post-secondaires, le fait d’avoir une occupation stable (emploi ou études à temps plein) ou non, le fait de consulter sous ordonnance légale, le niveau de violence psychologique émise, ainsi que les insécurités d’attachement (évitement de l’intimité, anxiété d’abandon) sont tous des prédicteurs significatifs du moment de cessation d’un suivi individuel de type ouvert pour violence conjugale. Plus précisément, les participants qui n’ont pas complété d’études post-secondaires, qui sont sans occupation stable, qui consultent sous ordonnance de la Cour ou de la DPJ et qui présentent peu d’évitement de l’intimité ont davantage tendance à cesser leur suivi de façon précoce; les participants qui ont complété des études post-secondaires et qui présentent peu d’anxiété d’abandon ont davantage tendance à cesser leur suivi à court terme; les clients qui posent moins d’actes de violence psychologique ont davantage tendance à mettre fin à leur suivi à moyen terme. Les implications cliniques de ces résultats sont discutées
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Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a complex issue. The present study explored how media exposure to female and male victims of IPV affected participants’ support for both groups. It was hypothesized that female victims would be supported more than male victims and that presenting stimuli that drew attention to male victims would not decrease support for female victims. Participants were presented with one of three posters, drawing attention to male victims, female victims, or both. A questionnaire was then used to assess perceptions of support for IPV victims, which was completed by 121 participants. Results indicated that females were supported more than males and that drawing attention to male victims did not decrease participants’ support for female victims. An exploratory analysis also revealed that women, overall, have high support for all victims, while men’s level of support changed depending on the type of information to which they were exposed.