ABSTRACT

While men's violence to women is an everyday culturally supported activity, this reader demonstrates: that men's violence can be curtailed and that women and children can be assisted effectively; that state policies and provision can be improved; and that women can actively participate in the resolution of their difficulties. Bringing together new work and key papers Home Truths About Domestic Violence provides a comprehensive overview and up-to-date account of the progress so far, and identifies what still needs to be done. Areas covered include:
* womens experience of violence
* childrens experience of violence
* personal experiences of the justice system
* state policies on violence in the US and UK
* educational programmes and initiatives.
This substantial Reader makes a significant contribution to the understanding of domestic violence from both a policy and a practice perspective. Together with its companion volume Home Truths About Child Sexual Abuse it provides an in-depth resource for a wide range of teachers, students and professionals, highlighting the diverse and complex dimensions of the problem of domestic violence.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Prevention, provision and protection

part I|67 pages

Women's experiences of violence from known men in the home

chapter 1|15 pages

Domestic violence and gender relations

Contexts and Connections 1

chapter 4|17 pages

Marital rape and marital murder

part II|55 pages

Children's experiences of violence in the home

chapter 6|17 pages

Child protection and domestic violence

Findings from a Rowntree/NSPCC study

chapter 7|17 pages

Unsung innovation

The history of work with children in UK domestic violence refuges

part III|54 pages

Women who fight back

chapter 8|20 pages

Women, anger and domestic violence

The implications for legal defences to murder

chapter 9|14 pages

The criminal justice response to women who kill

An interview with helena kennedy

chapter 10|18 pages

Southall black sisters

Domestic violence campaigns and alliances across the divisions of race, gender and class

part IV|61 pages

Influencing state policies on violence against women from known men

part V|40 pages

Partnership approaches by statutory and voluntary agencies

part VI|94 pages

Decreasing the violence of men

chapter 17|13 pages

The emerge program

chapter 18|17 pages

Policing repeated domestic violence by men

A new approach *

chapter 20|25 pages

Gendering domestic violence

The influence of feminism on policy and practice