This article examines the depoliticization of violence against women in indigenous communities. It argues that there is a pressing need to examine the ways in which gendered violence is explained, addressed and often sanctioned in indigenous communities. The article draws on Crenshaw's concept of political intersectionality and examines responses to gendered violence in indigenous communities through two groups: Aboriginal women in Canada and Sámi women in Scandinavia.</p
Violence against Indigenous women is a crisis of national proportions. Unfortunately, Indigenous peo...
In this thesis I examined political expressions of First Nations women. Using cultural studies conce...
Intersectionality has been one of the key orientations in feminist research in recent decades. The c...
This study examines indigenous women's involvement in state-sponsored anti-violence responses since ...
This thesis explores the factors that constrain or facilitate the creation of effective policies for...
An ethnographic study looking at the intersecting risks of violence and human immunodeficiency virus...
Indigenous women in Canada experience highly disproportionate rates of police violence in comparison...
This Article addresses the issue of violence against Aboriginal women. Part I concerns the historica...
In spite of the fast-growing literature on indigenous peoples and self-determination, there is a str...
Presents the current state of knowledge, practice and responses to violence against women in Austral...
This paper explores the case for a feminist, gendered analysis of anti‐colonial Indigenous struggles...
Claims that violence is gender-neutral are increasingly becoming “common sense ” in Canada. Antifemi...
Although violence against Indigenous women is a global human rights and social justice issue, it mus...
Examines the violence perpetrated against native women through a mixed media presentation of evidenc...
This article analyzes how the conceptualization of gendered violence shapes responses and possibilit...
Violence against Indigenous women is a crisis of national proportions. Unfortunately, Indigenous peo...
In this thesis I examined political expressions of First Nations women. Using cultural studies conce...
Intersectionality has been one of the key orientations in feminist research in recent decades. The c...
This study examines indigenous women's involvement in state-sponsored anti-violence responses since ...
This thesis explores the factors that constrain or facilitate the creation of effective policies for...
An ethnographic study looking at the intersecting risks of violence and human immunodeficiency virus...
Indigenous women in Canada experience highly disproportionate rates of police violence in comparison...
This Article addresses the issue of violence against Aboriginal women. Part I concerns the historica...
In spite of the fast-growing literature on indigenous peoples and self-determination, there is a str...
Presents the current state of knowledge, practice and responses to violence against women in Austral...
This paper explores the case for a feminist, gendered analysis of anti‐colonial Indigenous struggles...
Claims that violence is gender-neutral are increasingly becoming “common sense ” in Canada. Antifemi...
Although violence against Indigenous women is a global human rights and social justice issue, it mus...
Examines the violence perpetrated against native women through a mixed media presentation of evidenc...
This article analyzes how the conceptualization of gendered violence shapes responses and possibilit...
Violence against Indigenous women is a crisis of national proportions. Unfortunately, Indigenous peo...
In this thesis I examined political expressions of First Nations women. Using cultural studies conce...
Intersectionality has been one of the key orientations in feminist research in recent decades. The c...