An Eye for an Eye: Gender Revanchisme and the Negation of Attachment in Domestic Violence Policy
Domestic violence policy and practice occupy a unique, complex, and often paradoxical cultural and legal space. The criminalization of domestic violence stands in stark contrast to greater social tolerance for violence among other family role sets, particularly those involving children.
Debates concerning the role of gender in domestic violence emphasizing either male perpetration toward females or broadening the analysis to include mutuality of violence, female perpetration, and same-sex partner violence miss both key latent sociopolitical functions of policy and the greater
complexity of gender across other forms of family violence. Harsher criminal penalties for offenders and current Duluth model inspired treatment approaches have not produced any evidence of commensurate declines in domestic violence. We have substituted vengeance for efficacy in our zeal to
displace societal responsibility for domestic violence to scapegoated “batterers.”
Keywords: ATTACHMENT; CRIMINAL JUSTICE; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; GENDER POLITICS
Document Type: Short Communication
Publication date: 01 January 2012
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