
Every Year, Thousands Of Girls And Women Die At The Hands Of Blood Relatives. These Victims Are Accused Of Committing Honor Violations That Bring Shame Upon Their Families: Such 'transgressions' Range From Walking With A Boy In Their Neighborhood To Seeking To Marry A Man Of Their Own Choosing, To Being A Victim Of Rape. Women In The Crossfire Presents A Thorough Examination Of Honor Killing, An Ages-old Social Practice Through Which Women Are Trapped And Subjected To Terror And Deadly Violence As Consequences Of The Evolution Of Dysfunctional Patriarchal Structures And Competition Among Men For Domination. To Understand The Practice Of Honor Killing, Its Root Causes, And Possibilities For Protection And Prevention, Robert Paul Churchill Considers The Issues From A Variety Of Perspectives: Epistemic, Anthropological, Sociological, Cultural, Ethical, Historical, And Psychological. He Makes Use Of Original Research By Analyzing A Database Of Honor Killing Cases, Published Here For The First Time. Specifically, Women In The Crossfire Addresses The Salient Traits And Trends Present In Honor Killing Incidents And Examines How Honor Is Understood In Socio-cultural Contexts Where These Killings Occur. The Book Aims To Illuminate Causal Pathways That Combine To Produce The Tragedy Of Honor Killing. Socialization Within Honor-shame Cultures, Factors Such As Gender Construction, Child-rearing Practices, And Adverse Experiences Prime Boys And Men To Take Roles As One-day Killers Of Sisters, Daughters, And Wives In The Name Of Honor. The Book Further Relies On Theories Of Cultural Evolution To Explain How Honor Killing Was An Adaptation To Specific Ecological Challenges And Co-evolved With Other Patriarchic Institutions. The Ultimate Aim Of Women In The Crossfire Is To Convey Promising Methods Of Preventing Future Honor Killings, And To Protect Girls And Women From Victimization.
This book investigates the systemic causes and cultural mechanisms behind honor killings, seeking to identify effective strategies for the protection and prevention of such violence against women. Robert Paul Churchill, a scholar in ethics and human rights, utilizes a multidisciplinary framework to analyze the phenomenon. By integrating anthropological, sociological, and psychological perspectives, he examines how patriarchal structures and honor-shame cultures facilitate lethal violence against female family members. The work presents original research derived from a unique database of cases to map the causal pathways leading to these tragedies.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a rigorous, data-driven contribution to the study of gender-based violence and human rights. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational resource for those studying the intersection of cultural evolution and patriarchal structures.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190468572
ISBN-13:
9780190468576
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