Bibliographic Information

Towards a global femicide index : counting the costs

Sandra Walklate, Kate Fitz-Gibbon, Jude McCulloch and JaneMaree Maher

(Victims, culture, and society)

Routledge, [2020]

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Summary: "Increasingly there is global attention on the prevalence of women's deaths resulting from intimate partner violence. Campaigns such as 'Counting Dead Women' in Australia, the 'Femicide Census' in England, the Canadian Femicide Observatory and the emergence of family violence death review teams globally, build on the work of agencies such as the United Nations and the World Health Organisation highlighting the fatal consequences of intimate partner violence for women around the world. This book considers the need for and the steps to be taken towards creating a meaningful framework for a global index of women's deaths from intimate partner violence. While there are global indices for deaths that relate to public violence, such as terrorism, there is to date no systematic global count of killings of women by their intimate partners. It considers the possibilities and challenges that arise in counting intimate femicide. It argues that such an exercise needs to avoid narrow empiricism and instead be par

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Increasingly there is global attention on the prevalence of women's deaths resulting from intimate partner violence. Campaigns such as 'Counting Dead Women' in Australia, the 'Femicide Census' in England, the Canadian Femicide Observatory, and the emergence of family violence death review teams globally, build on the work of agencies such as the United Nations and the World Health Organisation, highlighting the fatal consequences of intimate partner violence for women around the world. This book considers the need for and the steps to be taken towards creating a meaningful framework for a global index of women's deaths from intimate partner violence. While there are global indices for deaths that relate to public violence, such as terrorism, there is to date no systematic global count of killings of women by their intimate partners. It considers the possibilities and challenges that arise in counting intimate femicide. It argues that such an exercise needs to avoid narrow empiricism and instead be part of a broader feminist political project aimed at ending violence against women. This work will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, law, policing, and politics.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction: Setting the Scene 2.How do we count? Mapping global approaches to counting women's deaths 3.Trends in counting: What do the numbers mean? 4.Why counting matters - the opportunities and benefits of counting intimate femicide 5.The risks of counting the killing of women 6.Using data on intimate femicide to inform risk 7.Conclusion Looking to the future: from counting to preventing?

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