توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Men’s Activism to End Violence Against Women: Voices from Spain, Sweden and the UK
نام کتاب : Men’s Activism to End Violence Against Women: Voices from Spain, Sweden and the UK
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : کنشگری مردان برای پایان دادن به خشونت علیه زنان: صداهایی از اسپانیا، سوئد و بریتانیا
سری :
نویسندگان : Nicole Westmarland, Anna-Lena Almqvist, Linn Egeberg Holmgren, Sandy Ruxton, Stephen Burrell, Custodio Delgado Valbuena
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2021
تعداد صفحات : 160
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447357971
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Front Cover\nMen\'s Activism to End Violence Against Women: Voices from Spain, Sweden and the UK\nCopyright information\nDedication\nTable of contents\nList of figures\nNotes on authors\nAcknowledgements\n1 The need for men’s involvement\n Why research men who take action against men’s violence against women?\n Our project\n Why choose Spain, Sweden and the UK?\n Backgrounds of interview participants\n Backgrounds of survey respondents\n Previous international research\n The Spanish context\n The Swedish context\n The UK context\n This book\n2 Becoming involved\n Why should men take action?\n Mothers, grandmothers, partners and other women in the family and community\n Personal experiences of violence and abuse within the family\n Grandfathers, fathers, brothers and uncles – male influences when growing up\n Alternative, non-conforming or marginalised masculinities when growing up\n Becoming a father\n Men and boys’ violence against other men and boys\n Influences at university\n Being influenced by a specific, high profile case of men’s violence against women\n Being ‘catapulted’ into the work due to a personal tragedy\n Employment/professional involvement\n Summary\n3 Being involved\n Women in the movement supporting men to be involved\n Rocky relationships – tensions with women’s groups\n ‘Male unicorns’ – putting men on a pedestal\n ‘Talking the talk but not walking the walk’\n The personal costs of being involved: being a ‘gender traitor’\n Relationships with other men\n Men as personal friends, peers and mentors\n Men’s groups\n Visible, political demonstrations with other men\n Backlash politics – relationships with ‘men’s rights activists’\n Summary\n4 Getting more men involved\n Who is involved? Which men speak out?\n Where are men involved? Where do men take a public stance?\n How to get more men involved\n Education as the key\n Encouraging men involved in other social justice related struggles\n Amplifying the voices and activism of working-class men and boys\n Generational differences\n What obstacles are there to men taking action?\n Strong gender equality discourse\n Limited political leadership\n ‘Not all men are bastards’ – changing the language?\n #MeToo\n Summary\n5 Conclusions: where next?\n Supporting research by others\n New contributions to the field\n Lessons for future research\n What does the future look like for men’s anti-violence activism?\n Final words\nReferences\nIndex\nBack Cover