“差距显而易见”:2019冠状病毒病、针对妇女的暴力以及对黑人和少数族裔幸存者的支持

IF 1.7 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Journal of Gender-Based Violence Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1332/239868021x16425822144020
R. Thiara, S. Roy
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引用次数: 4

摘要

2019冠状病毒病对妇女、黑人和少数族裔群体的不成比例的影响,突显了这一流行病的性别和交叉性质,结构性不平等的再现不成比例,并加剧了现有的性别和种族化不平等。大流行和随后的封锁导致家庭暴力和虐待增加;由于在多个相互关联的层面上受到不成比例的影响,家庭和更广泛的结构背景构成了黑人和少数族裔幸存者遭受暴力的场所。妇女不仅受到更严重的暴力和更广泛的强制控制,而且在寻求帮助方面也面临更大的限制。在财政紧缩、不公平的资金结构和同时加强的敌对移民环境下,黑人和少数民族组织的退役和关闭程度不成比例,使许多幸存者关闭了通往安全的大门。报告了2020年期间与黑人和少数民族组织就大流行病期间遇到的挑战进行的研究,重点介绍了他们如何迅速适应和重塑以幸存者为中心的支持提供,幸存者经历和应对扩大形式的虐待的方式,他们和妇女从主流服务提供者那里得到的回应,以及这需要更大的交叉宣传。
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‘The disparity is evident’: COVID-19, violence against women and support for Black and minoritised survivors
The disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on women and on Black and minoritised groups has highlighted the gendered and intersectional nature of the pandemic where structural inequality has reproduced disproportionately and exacerbated existing gendered and racialised inequalities. The pandemic and subsequent lockdowns led to an increase in domestic violence and abuse; noted to be disproportionately affected at multiple interlocking levels, home and the wider structural context constituted sites of violence for Black and minoritised survivors. Not only were women being subjected to heightened levels of violence and expanded coercive control but they faced greater constraints in seeking help. The decommissioning and closure of Black and minoritised organisations at a disproportionate level under austerity, inequitable funding structures and the simultaneous reinforcement of a hostile immigration environment have closed the door to safety for many survivors. Reporting on research conducted during 2020 with Black and minoritised organisations about the challenges encountered during the pandemic highlights how they rapidly adapted and reshaped survivor-centred support provision, the ways in which survivors experienced and responded to expanded forms of abuse, and the responses they and women received from mainstream service providers and the greater intersectional advocacy this required.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
49
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