NATIONAL POLICY FOR DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN: A QUALITATIVE STUDY

2018 ◽  
Vol 0 (13) ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Gonca KARATAŞ BARAN ◽  
Sena KAPLAN
Author(s):  
Anderson Reis de Sousa ◽  
Álvaro Pereira ◽  
Gilvânia Patrícia do Nascimento Paixão ◽  
Nadirlene Gomes Pereira ◽  
Luana Moura Campos ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Objective: to know the consequences that men experience related to incarceration by conjugal violence. Methods: qualitative study on 20 men in jail and indicted in criminal processes related to conjugal violence in a Court specialized in Family and Domestic Violence against women. The interviews were classified based on Collective Subject Discourse method, using NVIVO(r) software. Results: the collective discourse shows that the experience of preventive imprisonment starts a process of family dismantling, social stigma, financial hardship and psycho-emotional symptoms such as phobia, depression, hypertension, and headaches. Conclusion: due to the physical, mental and social consequences of the conjugal violence-related imprisonment experience, it is urgent to look carefully into the somatization process as well as to the prevention strategies regarding this process.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristiane Lopes Amarijo ◽  
Camila Daiane Silva ◽  
Daniele Ferreira Acosta ◽  
Vânia Dias Cruz ◽  
Jamila Geri Tomaschewski Barlem ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Objective to identify the power devices used by nurses to fight domestic violence against women from the perspective of parrhesia. Method qualitative study addressing 20 nursts from 13 Primary Heath Care units located in Rio Grande, South of Brazil. Interviews were held from April to June 2018, and data were treated using NVIVO 11 under the light of the Discursive Textual Analysis and Foucault's philosophical framework. Result two categories emerged from the analysis: (1) knowledge devices and (2) administrative/institutional devices. The first refers to the nurses’ actions, such as sharing information concerning domestic violence against women and the second concerns the health units’ actions to fight violence and referrals to other sectors focused on providing care to women experiencing domestic violence. Conclusion nurses use power devices to support women so they can transform their lives. Nursing can promote social transformations as it is engaged with actions intended to promote health.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet Oluwaleye Monisola

The trend of violence against women in Nigeria has increased more than ever recently, with many women having been deprived of their fundamental rights. Violence against women in Nigeria includes sexual harassment, physical violence, harmful traditional practices, emotional and psychological violence, and socio-economic violence. This article investigates cases of domestic violence against women in South West Nigeria by assessing the role of family courts in the adjudication of such cases. Both primary and secondary sources of data were employed to examine incidents of violence against women and the role of the family courts in ensuring justice. The author employed both primary and secondary sources of data; the data gathered were analysed by frequency and simple percentages, while qualitative data were descriptively analysed. The article reveals the causes of domestic violence against women to include a cultural belief in male superiority, women’s lack of awareness of their rights, women’s poverty owing to joblessness, men seeking sexual satisfaction by force, women having only male children, the social acceptance of discipline, the failure to punish the perpetrators of violence, the influence of alcohol, and in-laws’ interference in marital relationships. It also reveals the nature of domestic violence against women. The research revealed that the family courts have played prominent roles in protecting and defending the rights of women. The author therefore recommends that the law should strengthen the family courts by extending their power to penalise the perpetrators of violence against women. 


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