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Journal ArticleDOI

Community Response to Violence Against Wives: Charivari, Abstract Justice and Patriarchy

Russell P. Dobash, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1981 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 5, pp 563-581
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TLDR
The Refuge movement within the Women's Aid movement in Britain is trying in an egalitarian way to return the problem to women and the community and also to get social agencies to respond positively as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Here we analyze the forms of community and institutional responses to the problem of wife beating. The regulation of domestic affairs in European communities is traced from the fifteenth century to the present. The historical analysis begins with direct and personal responses of members of the community, such as misrules and charivaris, and traces the development of the more abstract and impersonal responses of the state institutions that emerged during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Both community and institutional forms of response were directed at upholding patriarchal authority and the husband's right to control his wife through various means, including the use of physical force. The intent was not to stop the violence but to set limits on the amount of violence a husband might use in pursuing his rights. With the transformation from ritualized forms of community response to abstract forms of institutional regulation, battered women were forced to seek help from institutions, such as the police, that were not established to deal with problems of domestic order and that remained relatively unconcerned with the problem of wife beating. The refuge movement within the Women's Aid movement in Britain is trying in an egalitarian way to return the problem to women and the community and also to get social agencies to respond positively. It rejects male violence unequivocally and challenges the patriarchical domination underlying-the acceptance and continuation of wife beating.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Myth of Sexual Symmetry in Marital Violence

TL;DR: This paper showed that the sexual symmetry of spousal homicide victimization does not reflect sexually symmetrical motivation or action and is in any case peculiar to the United States, and pointed out that defining self report data to a checklist of acts, devoid of motives, meanings and consequences cannot insure objectivity, validity or an adequate development of theory to explain violence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Test of an Argumentative Skill Deficiency Model of Interspousal Violence.

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of interpersonal physical violence is derived from the aggression literature and then is utilized to investigate interspousal violence, and strong support for the hypothesis was observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Separate and Intersecting Realities A Comparison of Men's and Women's Accounts of Violence Against Women

TL;DR: The results show that women and men provide significantly different accounts of men's violence, controlling behavior, and injuries, which make problematic the assumption that men's accounts of their own violent behavior can be used uncritically and without reference to women's Accounts of Men's violence.
References
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Book

Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison

TL;DR: Foucault shows the development of the Western system of prisons, police organizations, administrative and legal hierarchies for social control and the growth of disciplinary society as a whole as discussed by the authors.
Book

The Sociological Imagination

TL;DR: The sociological imagination is a sociological vision, a way of looking at the world that can see links between the apparently private problems of the individual and important social issues as discussed by the authors.
Book

The Making of the English Working Class

TL;DR: Fifty years since first publication, E P Thompson's revolutionary account of working-class culture and ideals is published in Penguin Modern Classics, with a new introduction by historian Michael Kenny as discussed by the authors.
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