Violence against women is conventionally framed as interpersonal violence perpetrated by men. While intimate partner violence and sexual assault are significant social problems, such a narrow framing obscures the diversity of women’s experiences, fails to illuminate the role social structures play, and excludes discussions of workplace, state, institutional, and symbolic violence. By drawing on a range of theoretical traditions emerging from feminism, criminology, and sociology, Women and Gendered Violence in Canada significantly broadens the conversation on violence against women. Social scientists Chris Bruckert and Tuulia Law begin by developing the conceptual and contextual framework underpinning gendered violence followed by an examination of its various manifestations: interpersonal, workplace, and structural. Each chapter puts historical context in conversation with current social issues, attends to the diversity of women’s experiences, and critically considers normative social and carceral "solutions," while highlighting women’s resistance. First person narratives are integrated throughout to personalize the material and issues being examined, and each chapter ends with a suggested activity to facilitate further engagement. This thoroughly updated second edition of Women and Gendered Violence in Canada considers recent shifts and changes in Canadian society, discourses, and laws.
Chris Bruckert is a full professor in the Department of Criminology at University of Ottawa.Tuulia Law is an associate professor in the Department of Social Science at York University.
List of IllustrationsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Expanding the Lens on Gendered ViolencePart A: Contextualizing Gendered Violence in Canada 1. An Intersectional Lens on Gendered Violence2. Situating Canadian Women: Socio-Economic Locations3. Regulatory Discourses and Representation: How Women Are "Known"Part B: Interpersonal Violence 4. Everyday Intrusions on the Street, on Campus, and Online5. Sexual Assault: Laws, Scripts, and Victim Blaming6. Intimate Partner Violence: "Brutish" Husbands and "Passive" WivesPart C: Workplace Violence 7. Not "Just A Joke": Worker-On-Worker Sexual Harassment, Bullying, and Microaggressions8. Just Part of the Job? Predatory, Situational, and Institutional Violence at Work9. Invisibilized Migrant Women: Over-Regulated and Under-Protected Workers from the Global SouthPart D: Structural Violence 10. Neoliberalism, Capitalism, and Governing Women’s Bodies On- and Offline11. State Violence: Women and the Criminal Justice System12. Colonial Violence Against Indigenous WomenConclusion: "No Free Lunch": Costs and Consequences of Gendered Violence in Canada and GloballyGlossaryWorks CitedCreditsIndex