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Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses,
Local Practices addresses the gaps in theory, methods, and
practices that are currently used to engage the problem of
gender-based violence. This book complements the work carried out
in the legal, human services, and health fields by demonstrating
how a focus on local issues and responses can better inform a
collaborative global response to the problem of gender-based
violence. With chapters covering Africa, Asia, Latin and North
America, and Oceania, the volume illustrates the various ways
scholars, practitioners, frontline workers, and policy makers can
work together to end violence in their local communities. The
chapters in this volume provide ample evidence that top-down
responses to violence have been inadequate, and that solutions are
available when the local historical, political, and social context
is taken into consideration. Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based
Violence contains useful insights that, when combined with the
efforts of other disciplines, offer solutions to the problem of
gender-based violence.
Applying Anthropology to Gender-Based Violence: Global Responses,
Local Practices addresses the gaps in theory, methods, and
practices that are currently used to engage the problem of
gender-based violence. This book complements the work carried out
in the legal, social work, and medical fields by demonstrating how
a focus on local issues and local responses can better inform a
collaborative global response to the problem of gender-based
violence. With chapters covering Africa, Asia, Latin and North
America, and Oceania, it provides ample evidence that richly
textured and qualitatively informed research can illuminate work
that is more quantitative in scope. The volume illustrates the
various ways scholars, practitioners, frontline workers, and policy
makers can work together to end forms of violence in their local
communities. The chapters in this volume demonstrate that the ways
top-down responses to violence have been inadequate, and that
solutions are available when the local historical, political, and
social context is taken into consideration. Applying Anthropology
to Gender-Based Violence contains useful insights that, when
combined with the efforts of other disciplines, offer solutions to
the problem of gender-based violence.
Intimate Partner Violence and Advocate Response: Redefining Love in
Western Belize offers new insight into the cross-cultural analysis
of gender-based intimate partner violence by blending activist
anthropology with in-depth ethnographic research to evaluate and
help ameliorate the crisis in Belize. Drawing from twenty months of
fieldwork in the Belizean Cayo District conducted between 2002 and
2013, Melissa A. Beske investigates the prevalence and complexity
of partner abuse, the contributing cultural and structural factors,
and the advocate dynamics across local, national, and transnational
frameworks in combating the problem. Combining enlivened
narratives, comparative viewpoints, and scholar-activism, this book
not only illustrates the lived suffering of partner abuse in Cayo,
but it also engages with the passionate commitment of survivors and
supporters as they endeavor to create a more equitable and peaceful
community. In doing so, it demonstrates an effective strategy for
the interdisciplinary assessment of gender-based abuse, which
satisfies demands for theoretical impartiality while simultaneously
enabling researchers to take an ethical stand in social causes.
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