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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Les violences conjugales, familiales et structurelles : vers une perspective intégrative des savoirs

TLDR
In this paper, the authors define the notion of violence conjugale as "a social grave and persistant problem which enforces le tiers des femmes de la planete en a deja ete victime".
Abstract
La violence conjugale est un probleme social grave et persistant ; le tiers des femmes de la planete en a deja ete victime. Cet article vise a discuter des liens empiriques et theoriques entre les violences conjugales, familiales et structurelles. L’article debutera par une breve mise en contexte decrivant comment la violence conjugale s’est construite comme un probleme socio-penal au Quebec. Les principales lacunes des connaissances actuelles dans le domaine seront ensuite identifiees, demontrant ainsi la necessite de mieux comprendre les liens complexes entre les violences conjugales, familiales et structurelles, trois concepts dont les definitions pourraient s’enrichir et se completer mutuellement. Cet article soulignera l’importance de prendre en consideration les realites diversifiees auxquelles sont confrontes les acteurs concernes par ces violences (femmes, hommes et enfants), en privilegiant une analyse globale qui integre non seulement les facteurs individuels et interpersonnels, mais aussi les facteurs sociaux et structurels, notamment les oppressions liees au genre ou a d’autres marqueurs de l’identite sociale. La discussion sera enrichie par des modeles theoriques decrivant les differentes dynamiques de violences conjugales et familiales ainsi que par le feminisme intersectionnel, qui s’avere fort utile pour l’analyse des violences structurelles. La conclusion traitera des retombees potentielles d’une analyse des liens entre les violences conjugales, familiales et structurelles sur les politiques sociales et les programmes d’intervention pour les victimes, les agresseurs et les enfants exposes a la violence conjugale.

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Citations
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Canadian Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect. 2000.

TL;DR: The second cycle of the Canadian Incidence Study of Reported Child Abuse and Neglect (CIS-2003) as discussed by the authors was released in 2003, and the major findings of the second cycle were presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Co-occurrence of intimate partner violence and child sexual abuse: prevalence, risk factors and related issues

TL;DR: A systematic examination of the scientific literature in several relevant databases was conducted to identify scientific articles, published between 2003 and 2013, that investigated this cooccurrence of intimate partner violence and intrafamilial child sexual abuse.

Organisation des Nations Unies

TL;DR: Fischer Georges as mentioned in this paper published an article entitled "The Annuaire francais de droit international, volume 2, 1956" in the journal of the Organisation des Nations Unies.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Intersectionality, Immigration, and Domestic Violence

TL;DR: The authors analyzed the relationship between immigration and domestic violence based on interviews with 137 immigrant women in the United States from 35 countries and found that immigration shapes how women understand domestic violence, their access to resources, and responses to domestic violence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Narrative Accounts of Origins A Blind Spot in the Intersectional Approach

TL;DR: This article used a case study of life-story narratives of former classmates of Dutch and Moluccan descent to argue that the constructionist approach to intersectionality, with its account of identity as a narrative construction rather than a practice of naming, offers better tools for answering questions concerning intersectional identity formation than a more systemic intersectional approach.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of early and later family violence on children's behavior problems and depression: a longitudinal, multi-informant perspective.

TL;DR: Girls were found to be at more risk for internalizing and externalizing behavior problems than boys, and children who were new victims at follow-up had the most internalizing problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychosocial Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence for Women and Men in Canada

TL;DR: The results suggest that the psychosocial impact of IPV is influenced by gender and by the nature of the violence, abuse, and control experienced, with particularly pronounced findings for women as they experienced the most chronic pattern of abuse and control documented in the study.