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Marianne Mollmann

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Violence Against Women: Not Going Away Until You Do Something About It

Posted: 10/31/11 05:09 PM ET

This article contains absolutely nothing new about violence against women. That's because we already know everything we need to know about it. Everyone knows it exists. Most people would say it's a pretty bad idea. And yet it doesn't go away. To say it's annoying would be a serious understatement.

In the many years I have worked on women's rights, violence against women has been a constant. Violence as an obstacle to health care. Violence as a barrier to education. Violence as an inevitable fact of life.

I am tired of it: violence against women may be a current fact -- every 15 seconds a woman is beaten up -- but it is not inevitable. So here are my top three key recommendations for how you (yes: you) can make it stop before it even starts:

1. Value women's work

Women earn 20 percent less than men in the United States. This pay inequality contributes to make women financially dependent on men and therefore stay in violent relationships. The United States needs federal legislation to guarantee women equal pay for equal work.

Basic labor protections in the United States exclude some professions that are dominated by women, such as domestic work. Part time workers in any profession are entitled to less labor market protections than those working full time, prompting some to leave the work pace altogether when they have kids. This does not make them less vulnerable to abuse. In fact, rather the opposite. So, until women are valued at work it's unlikely they'll be properly valued at home.

2. Stop stereotyping women.

We all do it: stereotyping. We stereotype children (erratic) grandparents (indulging) and fathers (aloof). We also stereotype women, and politicians base policies and laws on these stereotypes. For example, when states obligate a woman to wait 24 hours before she can have the abortion she already decided she needs, it is based on a stereotype of women as irrational and changeable.

Some stereotypes contribute to justifying domestic violence, because they set out expectations for female behavior that, if breached, serve as an excuse for abuse. "My man doesn't beat me," one young woman told me proudly on the playground the other day when I disclosed I work on women's rights. "Because I don't give him reason to: I have dinner ready when he comes home."

Maybe this example is extreme, but the next time you make assumptions about what men and women "should" do, ask yourself where the notions come from and if they could be used to justify abuse.

3. Make some noise.

It's been said before: in countries where the elimination of domestic violence is seen as a political priority, supported by policies, discourse, and money, the prevalence of violence does go down over time. And at the local level, we see time after time that in those societies or communities where intimate violence is stigmatized and reviled, it abates. Making noise works.

But at an even more local level, you should start making noise among your friends. If a woman is beaten up every 15 seconds, chances are someone you know has either faced violence or meted out abuse. They need to know where you stand: talk about violence as unacceptable and question policies that stereotype women.

They might find you annoying. But not as annoying as another decade of domestic violence and abuse.

Firs published at RHRealityCheck.org.

 

Follow Marianne Mollmann on Twitter: www.twitter.com/cluelesscamper

This article contains absolutely nothing new about violence against women. That's because we already know everything we need to know about it. Everyone knows it exists. Most people would say it's a pr...
This article contains absolutely nothing new about violence against women. That's because we already know everything we need to know about it. Everyone knows it exists. Most people would say it's a pr...
 
 
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04:15 PM on 11/02/2011
Lesson 4: include everyone, especially men. Stopping DV is everyone's business because it's a crime, not a private issue between intimates. I am a male DV specialist, but there are a number of DV groups that won't work with me, because I'm a man. This battle will never be won until the huge majority of men who know this behavior is wrong, are mobilized to help in the fight. This will take everyone, a national effort, just like the battle against drunk driving. It's everybody's business.
08:30 AM on 11/02/2011
This was something I had seen on another thread. It is a great piece of information.....> With support from the National Institute of Mental Health, Murray Straus Ph.D., and Richard Gelles Ph.D. conducted a nationally representa­­­­­­­tive survey from the Family Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire, of married and cohabiting couples regarding domestic violence. The results were first published in 1977 as was a book with co-author Suzanne Stienmetz Ph.D., in 1980. Straus & Gelles followed up the initial survey of more than two thousand couples, with a larger six-thousa­­­­­­­nd-c­o­u­p­l­e group in 1985.[1] In minor violence (slap, spank, throw something, push, grab or shove) the incident rates were equal for men and women. In severe violence (kick, bite, hit with a fist, hit or try to hit with something, beat up the other, threaten with a knife or gun, use a knife or gun) more men were victimized than women. Projecting the surveys onto the national population of married couples, the results showed more than eight million couples a year engaging in some form of domestic violence, 1.8 million women victims of severe violence, and two million male victims of severe violence.
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billywms
11:02 PM on 11/01/2011
Why do people only care about "Violence Against Women"--What about violence against men?--What's the difference?-Why separate them into categories based on gender?--Is violence against women worse then violence against men simply because they're women?--IYEYE!
11:59 PM on 11/01/2011
we're not trained to care about men in this society. violence against women is an act created by joe biden twenty years ago, and still as discriminatory as it was then. women assault men with impunity, and men are jailed unfairly EVERYDAY!! it's pathetic.
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billywms
01:58 AM on 11/02/2011
You got that right!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nix28
Embracing honesty and its ugly step-sister, truth.
07:30 PM on 11/01/2011
Enacting change at a societal level can be difficult, but I agree that individual change will spark change on an upward trend. We all need to speak out against violence, regardless of who perpetrates and who receives the violence. We also need to empower the victims of violence to make changes, and that happens by providing the proper supports and protections so that either they or the abuser can be removed from the home (and kept away from the home and other places of routine). In addition to that, we need to criminalize domestic violence in the same way that all assaults on strangers are penalized. We have a sex offender registry; I think a domestic violence registry would be a great idea as well. I also think mandatory counseling would be a great idea, as well as anger management. We have to address this issue on both ends and between both genders rather than just focusing on one aspect of this phenomenon.
06:42 PM on 11/01/2011
I have done some reserch myself and I must say the numbers seem to be even. Rennison and Welchans report from the Department of Justice, The National Institute of Mental Health, there was also a study done by Suzanne Stienmetz PhD., Murray Straus PhD. and Richard Gelles PhD wich shows vitims of severe domestic violence is the same between genders
12:00 AM on 11/02/2011
hey, i know you!! absolutely right!! i thought it was more than half were women.
08:28 AM on 11/02/2011
actualy if you look at the research there are 2 million male victims of severe domestic violence and 1.8 million female victims of severe domestic violence
12:36 AM on 11/01/2011
Lets go for eliminating violence, not just man on woman, but man on man, woman on man, and woman on woman. Perhaps I should add adult on child as well, but that gets into the spanking / punishment debate.

While men probably do more physical damage then women in their violence, women's hands are not clean either. And if we want to look at verbal and emotional violence, I very much doubt that women are better than men.
06:59 PM on 11/01/2011
Well said J R M. I have found studys that have said men are victims of severe domestic violence at a higher rate then women. Woman normally pick up a weapon such as baseball bats and fire arms. There have been sevral cases of women lately that was reported in the Huffpost of woman trying to cut there husbands head off with a saw and another man who tryed to get a TRO on his ex-wife but was denied by a judge then was shot and killed by his ex-wife shortly after he was denied that order of protection