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In this thoroughly revised second edition, expert researchers from a range of disciplines interrogate the relationship between gender and violence. Divided into three thematic sections covering concepts, representations and contexts, this Handbook connects micro-level interpersonal violence to macro-level structural forms.Including both new and updated chapters, the contributors analyse varied demonstrations of gender violence as well as the inequalities exacerbated by economic influences, climate change and settler colonialism. They assess intersectionality, race and sexualities across diverse economic and juridical backgrounds, elaborating on the tools used in discussions of gendered oppression. The Handbook incorporates a representational focus on the display of gender violence in popular culture, films, news media and photography. Contributors provide transnational perspectives, exploring the connection of gender and violence to various contemporary issues including the military, post-conflict settings, social movements and criminal justice.Multidisciplinary in scope, this Handbook is a vital resource for scholars and students of gender studies, development studies, international relations, sociology and human rights. It is also of interest to researchers new to the area for its in-depth overview of the topic.
Edited by Caitlin Biddolph, Lecturer in International Relations, School of International Studies and Education, University of Technology Sydney, Australia, Jihyun Kim, Postdoctoral Researcher, Asian Center for Women’s Studies, Ewha Womans University, Republic of Korea, Siân Perry, Independent Researcher, UK and Laura J. Shepherd, Professor of International Relations, Discipline of Government and International Relations, The University of Sydney, Australia
Contents1 Gender and violence: tools to think with 1Laura J. ShepherdPART I CONCEPTS2 Gender/s 10Marysia Zalewski3 Race 21Celeste Montoya4 Intersectionality 32Lise Rolandsen Agustín and Emanuela Lombardo5 Sexualities 46Jamie J. Hagen6 Masculinity 59David Duriesmith7 Patriarchy 70Kaye Quek8 Sexual violence in empire building 83Breny Mendoza9 Obstetric violence 95Daniela Bandelli and Patrizia Quattrocchi10 Femicide 107Julia Zulver and Lorena Fuentes11 Security 120Laura J. ShepherdPART II REPRESENTATIONS12 Narratives and violence: feminist dilemmas, revisited 133Roxai Krystalli13 Gender, violence, and popular culture 146Andrea McDonnell14 Gender and violence on film 157Megan A. Armstrong15 Gendered violence online 168Anwar Mhajne and Alexis Henshaw16 Gender and violence in news media and photography 179Roland Bleiker and Emma HutchisonPART III CONTEXTS17 Transnational perspectives on gender violence 195Amber Lusvardi, Kaitlin Kelly-Thompson and S. Laurel Weldon18 Gender, violence, and the Women, Peace and Security agenda 212Sara Meger19 Gender, violence, and the military 226Joane Nagel20 Rethinking gender and violence in post-conflict settings: perspectives fromSouth Asia 239Shweta Singh21 Gender, violence, and nuclear weapons 249Ruoyu Li and Catherine Eschle22 Gender, violence, and migration 259Jihyun Kim23 Gender, violence, and ‘safe cities’ 270Paula Meth24 Gender and economic violence 284Penny Griffin25 Gender, violence, and climate justice 306Charlotte Weatherill26 The violences of settler colonialism and the maintenance of theheteropatriarchal social order 319Sarah Maddison and Julia Hurst27 Gender, violence, and social movements 331Dipali Anumol28 Sexual violence, memory, and politics of knowledge production 342Eunkyung Kim29 Gender, violence, and human rights 355Dianne Otto30 Gender, violence, and criminal justice 371Bianca Fileborn31 Sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) crimes in conflict andinternational criminal justice 386Charlotte Carney32 Gender and violence: reflections and future directions 397Caitlin Biddolph, Jihyun Kim and Siân Perry
‘The first quarter of the twenty-first century has been marked by escalating violence across the world. In the Handbook on Gender and Violence, Biddolph and colleagues foreground an interdisciplinary feminist vocabulary that helps us make sense of the multiple ways in which this violence is gendered. The Handbook is valuable not only as an accessible and wide-ranging academic contribution but also as a resource to cope with, and respond to, contemporary violence.’