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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $34.50

Format:
Paperback
240 pp.
6.125" x 9.25"

ISBN-13:
9780199755912

Publication date:
August 2012

Imprint: OUP US


The Political Economy of Violence against Women

Jacqui True

Series : Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations

Violence against women is a major problem in all countries, affecting women in every socio-economic group and at every life stage. Nowhere in the world do women share equal social and economic rights with men or the same access as men to productive resources. Economic globalization and development are creating new challenges for women's rights as well as some new opportunities for advancing women's economic independence and gender equality. Yet, when women have access to productive resources and they enjoy social and economic rights they are less vulnerable to violence across all societies.

The Political Economy of Violence against Women develops a feminist political economy approach to identify the linkages between different forms of violence against women and macro structural processes in strategic local and global sites - from the household to the transnational level. In doing so, it seeks to account for the globally increasing scale and brutality of violence against women. These sites include economic restructuring and men's reaction to the loss of secure employment, the abusive exploitation associated with the transnational migration of women workers, the growth of a sex trade around the creation of free trade zones, the spike in violence against women in financial liberalization and crises, the scourge of sexual violence in armed conflict and post-crisis peacebuilding or reconstruction efforts and the deleterious gendered impacts of natural disasters.

Examples are drawn from South Africa, Kenya, the Democratic Republic of Congo, China, Ciudad Juarez in Mexico, the Pacific Islands, Argentina, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Haiti, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, New Zealand, Ireland, the United Kingdom, the United States and Iceland.

Readership : Students of international studies, women's studies, human rights, and development studies. policy, research and advocacy communities.

1. From Domestic Violence to War Crimes: The Political Economy of Violence Against Women
2. What Has Poverty Got to Do With It? Feminist Frameworks for Analyzing Violence Against Women
3. Losing Entitlement, Regaining Control: Masculinities and Competitive Globalization
4. Crossing Borders to Make Ends Meet: Sex Trafficking, the Maid Trade, and Other Gendered Forms of Labor Exploitation
5. New Spaces of Gender Violence: Economic Transition and Trade
6. Boom, Bust and Beating: International Financial Institutions, Crises, and Violence against Women
7. Old and New Tactics of War: Sexual Violence in Armed Conflict
8. Rebuilding With or Without Women? Gendered Violence in Post-Conflict Peace and Reconstruction
9. Who Suffers Most? Gendered Violence in Natural Disasters and their Aftermath
10. Researching Violence Against Women: The Point is to Change it

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Jacqui True is Professor of Politics and international Relations at Monash University.


Restorative Justice and Violence Against Women - Edited by James Ptacek
Human Rights and Violence Against Women - Dr. Patricia Londono
The Victimization of Women - Michelle L. Meloy and Susan L. Miller
Framed by Gender - Cecilia L. Ridgeway

Special Features

  • Applies political economy approach to violence against women in global context.
  • Challenges existing scholarly and policy approaches.
  • Draws on True's research for the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women.
  • Provides strong evidence that increasing women's access to productive resources and social and economic rights lessens their vulnerability to violence across all societies.