This article builds on feminist scholarship on intersectionality to address violence against women, and state policy thereon. It takes up the challenge of analysing the complex, situated and spatial relationship between theorizing on violence against women and state policy on such violence. Drawing on extensive comparative European data, it explores the relations of gender and intersectionality, conceptualized as gendered intersectionalities, by examining how multiple inequalities are made visible and invisible in state policy and debates in the Netherlands, Sweden and the UK. Attention is paid to different forms of gendered intersectionalities in policy, for example, tendencies to degender violence against women. A key aim of the article ...
According to the World Economic Forum, Sweden ranks as one of the most women-friendly countries in t...
In 2014, the newly elected Swedish government declared itself as the first feminist government in th...
One of the important themes in debating violence in the international political fora is ‘violence ag...
This article builds on feminist scholarship on intersectionality to address violence against women, ...
In this excellent book, Rolandsen Augustín examines processes of institutionalization and mobilisati...
What happens when we focus primarily on violence as a central question—either within the gender regi...
This article identifies and critiques presumptions about gender and violence that continue to frame ...
This article juxtaposes shifts in prevailing frames on domestic violence in the Netherlands, Hungary...
The purpose of this thesis is to address the relative effectiveness and usefulness of intersectional...
Inclusiveness of different social groups and responsiveness to the needs of increasingly diverse soc...
Abuse and violence against women is not only a serious violation of human rights, but is also, accor...
This paper discusses current Swedish international development policies on gender and violence. It d...
Political Intersectionality: Tackling Inequalities in Public Policies in Scandinavia An analytical a...
Contains fulltext : 198834.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
Violence against women is an established issue of concern under international law as well as in the ...
According to the World Economic Forum, Sweden ranks as one of the most women-friendly countries in t...
In 2014, the newly elected Swedish government declared itself as the first feminist government in th...
One of the important themes in debating violence in the international political fora is ‘violence ag...
This article builds on feminist scholarship on intersectionality to address violence against women, ...
In this excellent book, Rolandsen Augustín examines processes of institutionalization and mobilisati...
What happens when we focus primarily on violence as a central question—either within the gender regi...
This article identifies and critiques presumptions about gender and violence that continue to frame ...
This article juxtaposes shifts in prevailing frames on domestic violence in the Netherlands, Hungary...
The purpose of this thesis is to address the relative effectiveness and usefulness of intersectional...
Inclusiveness of different social groups and responsiveness to the needs of increasingly diverse soc...
Abuse and violence against women is not only a serious violation of human rights, but is also, accor...
This paper discusses current Swedish international development policies on gender and violence. It d...
Political Intersectionality: Tackling Inequalities in Public Policies in Scandinavia An analytical a...
Contains fulltext : 198834.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access
Violence against women is an established issue of concern under international law as well as in the ...
According to the World Economic Forum, Sweden ranks as one of the most women-friendly countries in t...
In 2014, the newly elected Swedish government declared itself as the first feminist government in th...
One of the important themes in debating violence in the international political fora is ‘violence ag...