Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses, Local Practices

Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses, Local Practices

Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses, Local Practices

Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses, Local Practices

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Overview

Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses, Local Practices addresses the gaps in theory, methods, and practices that are currently used to engage the problem of gender-based violence. This book complements the work carried out in the legal, social work, and medical fields by demonstrating how a focus on local issues and local responses can better inform a collaborative global response to the problem of gender-based violence. With chapters covering Africa, Asia, Latin and North America, and Oceania, it provides ample evidence that richly textured and qualitatively informed research can illuminate work that is more quantitative in scope. The volume illustrates the various ways scholars, practitioners, frontline workers, and policy makers can work together to end forms of violence in their local communities. The chapters in this volume demonstrate that the ways top-down responses to violence have been inadequate, and that solutions are available when the local historical, political, and social context is taken into consideration. Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence contains useful insights that, when combined with the efforts of other disciplines, offer solutions to the problem of gender-based violence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498509046
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 08/20/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 226
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Jennifer R. Wies is associate professor and program director of anthropology at Eastern Kentucky University.

Hillary J. Haldane is associate professor and program director of anthropology at Quinnipiac University.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
Acknowledgments
IntroductionReturn to the Local: Lessons for Global Change
Jennifer R. Wies and Hillary J. Haldane
Part I Ethnographic Intimacies
Chapter 1Domestic Violence, Embodiment, and Women's Lives in Northern Vietnam
Lynn Kwiatkowski
Chapter 2 Bureaucratic Bindings: Refugee Resettlement and Intimate Partner Abuse
Elizabeth Wirtz
Part II Multi-Scalar Responses to Gender-Based Violence
Chapter 3 Munted: Rebuilding Community after Disaster
Hillary J. Haldane
Chapter 4 Gender-Based Violence and the State in Guatemala’s Genocide and Beyond
M. Gabriela Torres Chapter 5 Prostitution Diversion Programs Structural Violence
Yasmina Katsulis
Part III Critical Challenges in the Anthropology of Gender-Based Violence
Chapter 6 Sex Trafficking of Native Peoples: History, Race, and Law
April D. J. Petillo
Chapter 7 Pa Manyen Fanm Nan Konsa: Understanding Violence against Women afterHaiti’s Earthquake
Mark Schuller
Chapter 8 Campus Sexual Violence Policies and Practices: A Holistic and Historical Approach to Research and Practice
Jennifer R. Wies
Part IVAvenues for Change
Chapter 9 “I’m a REAL Father Now!” Using Applied Anthropology to Promote Positive Masculinities to Reduce Family Violence in Northern Uganda
Rebecka Lundgren and Kimberly Ashburn
Chapter 10 Employing Scholar-Activist Anthropology to Counter Gender-Based Violence in Belize
Melissa Beske
Chapter 11 Intimate Partner Violence, Social Change, and Scholar-Activism in Coastal Ecuador
Karin Friederic
Bibliography
About the Author


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