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In: Strategic survey, Band 70, Heft 1, S. 87-90
ISSN: 1476-4997
Intro -- 1 Die unerträgliche Leichtigkeit der Freiheit -- Bleiben oder gehen? -- Don´t believe the Hype! -- Hauptsache nichts verpassen! -- Depressionshochburg Berlin -- Irgendwas mit Medien -- Kraftakt Berlin -- 2 Goldener Reiter -- Woche 1 -- Woche 2 -- Woche 3 -- Woche 4 -- 3 Mein Freund, der Kaktus -- 4 Cyberdepression -- Depression und Social Media -- Wenn soziale Netzwerke depressiv machen -- Mein persönliches How-to im Umgang mit Social Media -- 5 Bin ich die, die ich sein soll, oder doch jemand anders? -- »Was willst du denn mal werden?« -- »Jetzt beruhig' dich erst mal, Vicky!« -- »Was ist schon normal?« -- »Wenn jede Frau so dächte …« -- »Ich bin gut, so wie ich bin!« -- 6 Giftfallen -- 7 »Stop apologising for your emotions!«.
As part of an effort to grapple with the meaning of violence, Hannah Arendt argued that it was curious how infrequently violence was taken up for special consideration in conversations of history and politics, remarking that "this shows to what an extent violence and its arbitrariness were taken for granted and therefore neglected; no one questions or examines what is obvious to all" (8). While we are not suggesting that violence has eluded the critical eye in the time since Arendt's argument, there is something remarkably resonant about the idea that violence is taken-for-granted as part of human existence, and thus—for privileged citizens protected from its affects—invisible. In this issue, the contributors explore how violence continues to define and shape social, political, and cultural terrains. In what follows, we explore what it means to talk about violence and follow this with a general introduction to the pieces in this special issue that tease out the various locations of violence and its representations across different spaces.
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In: Nouvelles questions féministes: revue internationale francophone, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 4-7
ISSN: 2297-3850
In: Gérontologie et société, Band 13 / n° 54, Heft 3, S. 3-5
In: Journal of gender-based violence: JGBV, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 11-31
ISSN: 2398-6816
This article aims to mainstream gender into the measurement of violence, in order to assist the development of the theory of change needed to support actions to end violence. It addresses the division between gender-neutral and women-only strategies of data collection that is failing to deliver the quality evidence needed to address the extent and distribution of violence, developing a better operationalisation of the concepts of gender and violence for statistical analysis, and producing a checklist of criteria to assess the quality of statistics on gendered violence. It assesses the strengths and weakness of surveys linked to two contrasting theoretical perspectives: the Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) Survey of Violence Against Women and the Office for National Statistics (ONS) Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW). It shows how the FRA Survey fails and how the ONS has limited the potential of the CSEW. It therefore offers a solution with a short questionnaire that is fit for purpose as well as ways of analysing data that escape the current polarisation.
In: Journal of family violence, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 23-33
ISSN: 1573-2851
In: Violence and Society Ser
Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Introduction -- The Aftermath of a Violent Death -- Chapter One A Problem Close to Home -- Risk Factors -- Poverty -- Traditional Social Values -- Alcohol and Drug Abuse -- Other Factors -- Discipline, Punishment, and Domestic Violence -- Smarter, Safer Punishment and Discipline -- Types of Abuse -- Corporal Punishment -- Who Are the Victims? -- Victims of Child Abuse -- Victims of Spousal Abuse and Partner Abuse -- Victims of Elder Abuse -- Chapter Two Recognizing Abusers and Abuse -- Who Are the Abusers? -- Why Abuse Happens -- The Abuser Profile -- Domestic Violence Is a Crime -- Prosecuting Spousal and Partner Abuse -- Child Abuse and the Law -- Taking Action Against Domestic Violence -- A Place to Go -- Chapter Three Putting an End to Domestic Violence -- Steps to Ending Violence -- Intervention -- The Safety Plan -- Emergency 911 -- Control of Information -- Chapter Four Victims Take Back the Power -- What Happens When You Tell? -- Dating Violence -- Is Your Relationship Heading for Trouble? -- The Painful Aftermath of Abuse -- Domestic Violence Traps -- Glossary -- For More Information -- Web Sites -- For Further Reading -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the Author -- Photo Credits
In: Routledge advances in international relations and global
In: Sociétés & représentations: les cahiers du CREDHESS, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 241-257
ISSN: 2104-404X
Résumé Cet article évoque une affaire criminelle qui s'est déroulée au milieu du xviii e siècle, dans la ville de Laval en Mayenne, consécutive à des violences faites la nuit, par des jeunes gens en bande, que les documents judiciaires de l'époque appellent des « coureurs de nuit ». Ce fait divers permet de réfléchir sur les violences urbaines et leur signification. En étudiant les diverses pièces de procédure (la plainte, les rapports d'experts, surtout les témoignages), on peut suivre les différentes étapes d'un procès criminel mais on peut également établir les faits. Une « course nocturne », si elle se traduit inévitablement par une agression, respecte des règles (notamment faire le maximum de bruit pour effrayer les habitants), comme si les jeunes gens se pliaient à une sorte de rituel recommencé de génération en génération. La clémence des jugements rendus et les remarques faites par un magistrat sur les raisons de cette attitude confortent l'idée que cette violence est considérée comme faisant partie des débordements traditionnels de la jeunesse et ne remet pas en cause l'ordre social. Les jeunes gens violents d'une nuit prendront plus tard toute leur place dans la société.
In: Worldview, Band 14, Heft 4, S. 5-9
The problem of violence in American culture has been a subject of increasing concern during the past two decades. In the fifties, there was rampant the school of "consensus" history writing, which tended to deny the existence of conflicts about basic issues in American history. More recently, the past has been portrayed in an entirely different light: Conflict, and particularly violent conflict, are seen as having been virtually endemic. Against the background of violent crime and civil disturbance, several presidential commissions have investigated violence, and they usually emerge with the conclusion that Americans are a peculiarly violent people. The atrocities of the Vietnam war, and police and ghetto violence, have led many to wonder at the same time whether the alleged merits of the American political system are as great as its defenders have insisted.