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The main topics of VAW

The main topics of VAW. Giovanna Tagliacozzo. Which kind of information: the essential issues to know violence extension and nature. Focus on physical and sexual violence (partner and non partner)

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The main topics of VAW

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  1. The main topics of VAW Giovanna Tagliacozzo

  2. Which kind of information: the essential issues to know violence extension and nature • Focus on physical and sexual violence (partner and non partner) • Focus on domestic violence (Psychological and verbal violence, Economical violence, Stalking) Focus on: • Victim’s violence perceptionas a crime • Seriousness (injuries and type of injuries, perceived seriousness, feeling of life in danger, use of medicines and therapy to cope with violence) • Intensity (one or more times violence occurred, repetitiveness) • Violence dynamics (arms, alcohol abuse of perpetrators) • Reporting behaviour and women capacity of seeking for help (shelters, with whom women speak of violence, police relationship...) • Children witness of violence • Violence in pregnancy

  3. Which kind of information: the essential issues to understand violence risk factors • Abuse in WOMEN background • Mother abuse history • Childhood victimisation • Abuse in the PARTNER background • Experience of violence in childhood • Witness of father violence against own mother’s • Individual factor risks partner’s related • partner’s alcohol abuse • Partner violent outside family too • Social factor risks partner related • Women considered as an object to denigration and berate

  4. Le list can be composed • intimate partner violence • harmful traditional practices, including female genital mutilation/cutting • female infanticide and prenatal sex selection • early marriage, forced marriage, dowry-related violence • crimes against women committed in the name of “honour” • maltreatment of widows; • femicide; • sexual violence by non-partners; • Sexual harassment and violence in the workplace and elsewhere • trafficking in women.

  5. Le list can be composed But- The list of violence forms can be not exhaustive- Some countries may have or not to have some violence forms- some violence forms are temporally contextualized- Other countries don’t have the possibilities to collect data on them- Some crimes are not easy to collect in a population surveys • intimate partner violence • harmful traditional practices, including female genital mutilation/cutting • female infanticide and prenatal sex selection • early marriage, forced marriage, dowry-related violence • crimes against women committed in the name of “honour” • maltreatment of widows; • femicide; • sexual violence by non-partners; • Sexual harassment and violence in the workplace and elsewhere • trafficking in women.

  6. From violence definition: Different forms of violence: • Verbal (critics, humiliations,) • Psychological (downgrating, blackmail, intimidation) • Economic (control of expenditure, no acces to money, no information on income) • Stalking • Physical • Sexual

  7. Psychological violence • Most forms are not evident (threatening, downgrading, intimidation, limitation of freedom, excessive jealousy) • Women rarely recognized it as violence • Furthermore it’s not visible from a social point of view, so it’s difficult for women to speak about it and give vent to owns feeling • It’s culturally accepted that a woman has not to be autonomous thoughts, that she has to do what her husband is asking; or that she is or thinks to be what her husband tell her. • It could be measured considering the different aspects of the daily life

  8. Psychological violence • denigration • behaviour control • segregation strategies • intimidations • heavy financial restraint suffered by partner’s side

  9. Now, I would like to ask about some situations that can happen in relationships. Would you say your husband/partner/ boyfriend: • Get angry if you talk to other men? • Humiliate or offend you in front of other people, for example: • Treating you as if you were stupid, making fun of your ideas, or telling personal things about you? • 3 Criticise you for how you look, how you dress or how you do your hair, for example by saying • That you are unattractive, Inadequate? • 4 Criticise you for how you look after the home, for How you cook, or how you educate your children, for example by saying that you are incapable and good for nothing? • 5 Ignore you, not talk to you, not listen to you, for example by not considering what You have to say or not answering your questions? • Insult you or say horrible things to you that make you feel bad?

  10. Try to limit your relationship with your family or with your friends? • Prevent you or try to prevent you from working? • Prevent or try to prevent you from studying or doing other things that get you out of the house? • Tell you how to dress, do your hair, or behave in public? • Constantly doubt your faithfulness? • Follow you or watch your movements in a way that scares you? • Constantly check how much and how you are spending? • Prevent you from knowing the figure of the family income? • Prevent you from using your own money or the family's money? • Damage or destroy your things or other objects or personal belongings of yours? • Hurt or threaten to hurt your children? • Hurt or threaten to hurt people that are close to you? • Hurt or threaten to hurt your animals, if you have any? • Threaten to kill himself?

  11. Nature of violence -Stalking • tried in a nagging way to talk to the woman against her will • repeatedly asked for appointments to meet her • waited for her outside home or at school or at work • sent messages, telephone calls, e-mails, mails or undesired presents • followed her or spied her • adopted other strategies

  12. Nature of violence –physical violence • ranked from the less to the most serious one: • threat to be physically hit • to be pushed, grabbed • to be yanked or knocked with an object • to be slapped, kicked, punched or • bitten • attempted strangulation, of a choking, • burning • threats with weapons • Other physical violence

  13. Nature of violence – sexual violence • rape • other form of rape (anal or oral penetration) • (only if woman says “no” at rape question) • attempted rape • sexual intercourses with a third party • undesired sexual intercourses, suffered • for fear of consequences • degrading and humiliating sexual activities • (only for partner violence) • other sexual violence forms not included before

  14. Author of violence • Current • Previous • Husband • Cohabitant • Fiancé Partner Non partner • Unknown persons • Acquaintances • Friends • Colleagues • Family friends • Relatives • Others

  15. Occurrence period • partner violence • the period is identified by the relationship • non partner violence • since 16teen years old • before 16teen years old • forced sexual activities by everyone • physical violence by parents

  16. Reference period • the life course • the 12 last months (before the interviews) • But many other periods can be used • before 20 years ago • 10-20 years ago • 5-10 years ago • the last five years.

  17. Intensity of violence • More complex issue • How to ask numbers of incidents • Do women remember well? • Subjective dimension in quantifyingseries of incidents • How to count series of incidents

  18. Intensity of violence • numbers of incidents • How many times did it happen? /_/_/ • don’t know/don’t remember • how often did it happen? • every day/almost every day; • one or more times a weeks (1-3); • one or more times a month (1-3); • one or more times a year; • only in particular periods of the year but in repetitively way; • don’t know/don’t remember; don’t answer/refuse”

  19. Intensity of violence • Until now is more useful • An indicator of violence occurred once/more than once • Working progress • indicator of frequency calculating the percentage of violence suffered “1, 2, 3, more than 3 times” • (where the last category includes also the answers related to “how often it happened”) • or • Indicator translating the number value, sometimes very high, for example 30, 45, 97 in the qualitative items.

  20. Victims andoffender characteristics • geographical area • victims’ characteristics • age • civil status • level of education, • professional status, etc…… • offenders’ characteristic

  21. Violence Seriousness • Critics aspects: • information on the last episodes • ambivalence of seriousness measure • reporting behaviour • getting in touch with shelters or other specialised agency • Injuries and types of injuries • use of alcohol or medication • Use of professional counselling to cope with violent experience • regarding to the incident as a crime • Possibility of ranking the screening questions • Use of frequency • Use of violence length (duration)

  22. Violence details • Episode contextualization (Place, period of the year) • Author’s characteristics • Episode details • Seriousness and consequences of violence • Victim behaviors and reaction • Relation with police • Seeking for help • Violence story in case of domestic violence • including violence when the victim is pregnant • children witness of the violence • children as victims of violence • Attempts to escape from violence • Economic loss and cost • Consequences

  23. Questionnaire sections • SCR_NP Non partner violence screening • REP_NP Non-partner victimisation report • CRT_PR Characteristics of current intimate partner • SCR_PR Actual partner violence screening • SCR_EX Former partners violence screening • CRT_EX Characteristics of violent previous intimate partner • REP_PR Partner victimisation report • H History of violence in the family of origin endured by the partner of the interviewee and by the interviewee

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