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With examples from throughout Europe and the United States, the contributors to this volume explore how gender violence is framed through language and what this means for research and policy. Language shapes responses to abuse and approaches to perpetrators and interfaces with national debates about gender, violence, and social change.1. Just Words? Purpose, Translation, and Metaphor in Framing Sexual and Domestic Violence through Language; Renate Klein 2. Neutralising Gendered Violence: Subsuming Men's Violence against Women into Gender-neutral Language; Carole Wright and Jeff Hearn 3. Communicating Prevalence Survey Results; Stephanie A. Condon 4. 'Clouds Darkening the Blue Marital Sky': How Language in Police's Reports (Re)constructs Intimate Partner Homicides; Daniela Gloor and Hanna Meier 5. Talking about Violence: How People Convey Stereotypical Messages about Perpetrator and Victim through the Use of Biased Language; Anna Kwiatkowska 6. A Matter of Mental Health? Treatment of Perpetrators of Domestic Violence in Denmark and the Underlying Perception of Violence; Bo Wagner S?rensen 7. Dangerous Words: How Euphemisms May Imperil Women's Lives; Britta Mogensen 8. Language for Institutional Change: Notes from US Higher Education; Renate Klein
With its specific focus on language and the challenge of communicating in a multi-lingual and multi-disciplinary field, this book contributes to an ongoing and very current international debate on the meaning of gender violence that is tangibly relevant on the ground and in policy-making, including legislation. - Nancy Gage-Lindner, Hesse Department of Social Welfare, Section Head Violence Prevention and Intervention, Youth Protective Services, Germany
St?phanie Condon, Institut national d'?tudes d?mographiques (National Institute of Demography), FranceDaniela Gloor, Social Insight, SwitzerlandJeff Hearn, Hanken School of Economics, FinlandAnna Kwiatkowska, Polish Academy of Sciences, PolandHanna Meier, Soló,Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell