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Journal Article

Citation

Pantazis C, Bibbings L. Soc. Policy Soc. 2006; 5(1): 63-65.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1474746405002745

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Over the last 30 or so years the problem of violence against women and how states should respond to it, in its myriad of forms, has become increasingly prevalent in academic and policy debates at both the national and international level. An active international women's movement, spanning Europe, the United States and many parts of the Southern hemisphere, including in particular Latin America and South Asia, has facilitated this growing awareness of gendered violence as a social problem requiring intervention. In a separate, but ultimately related, development there has been a growing global concern with extending human rights protection to women as a distinct group with specific concerns and needs. As a consequence of these twin developments, the tendency for gendered violence to be seen as an essentially private affair requiring limited state interfe-rence has slowly, but increasingly, been superseded by the recognition that the state has been failing victims.


Language: en

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