TRANSFORMING CULTURAL NORMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
TRANSFORMING CULTURAL NORMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
Author(s): Melissa L. BregerSubject(s): Gender Studies
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: gender; bias; violence against women; rape; culture; norms; modern society
Summary/Abstract: A version of these remarks was delivered at the Stoneman/Katz Human Rights, Gender and the Law Conference: The State of Equality in Comparative Perspective, held at Albany Law School in April of 2013. The conference transcript was assembled into a monograph to memorialize the conference itself, as well as the Spring 2013 Kate Stoneman1 Series of Events. These remarks were part of a larger panel examining the issue of law and “culture.” In my remarks, I addressed culture in modern society which, though an ambiguous concept, greatly informs our world and our actions. I examined how individuals have become complacent at times, adopting a culture that normalizes violence towards women. I posited that even while explicit gender bias is often deemed unacceptable, modern society is embedded with implicit biases against women. These implicit biases contribute to a culture that is imbued with gendered norms relating to domination, over-sexualization, violation, and power and control over women and girls. I argued that the way to remedy these problems is to change the underlying culture in such a way that redefines gendered norms and gender equality. This can be achieved at least partially by educating our children before these gendered norms become embedded in their minds.
Journal: Journal of Research in Gender Studies
- Issue Year: 4/2014
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 39-51
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF