Description

Book Synopsis
Nordic countries are generally regarded as global welfare role models in terms of their image of being gender equal, child-friendly and culturally tolerant. Consequently, the influence of Nordic welfare systems in transnational academic and policy debates has been immense. By focusing on the vital welfare issue of violence by men to female partners and/or their children, this book seeks to reconsider this over-simplistic image. Drawing on new research from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, the book critically examines how men's violence in families is perceived and responded to in the Nordic context. It pays particular attention to the links between violence to women and violence to children, children's perspectives, professional discourses and responses, and legal and policy approaches. With clear links between research, policy and practice, the book is highly relevant to a wide audience, including academics, researchers and students in the fields of social work, health, criminology, sociology, social policy, gender studies, European studies and law. It is also recommended reading for welfare managers, practitioners, and policy makers.

Trade Review
"This book provides a welcome focus on men's violence, its family impact and what can be done about it. Lessons for UK academics and practitioners are both implicit and explicit, from the socio-legal context to the need for continued vigilance in the community. If enlightened countries such as those covered here cannot guarantee safety for women and children, then there is something about men's violent behaviour and society's sanctioning of it that we all need to think about and work to change. This book will help us along that road." Audrey Mullender, Principal, Ruskin College, Oxford

Table of Contents
Introduction: Nordic issues and dilemmas ~ Maria Eriksson and Keith Pringle; Children, abuse and parental contact in Denmark ~ Marianne Hester; Commitments and contradictions: linking violence, parenthood and professionalism ~ Suvi Keskinen; "Talking feels like you wouldn't love Dad anymore": children's emotions, close relations and domestic violence ~ Hannele Forsberg; By-passing the relationship between fatherhood and violence in Finnish policy and research ~ Teija Hautanen; Marching on the spot? Dealing with violence against women in Norway ~ Wenche Jonassen; Children's peace? The possibility of the law to protect children by means of criminal law and family law ~ Gudrun Nordborg; A visible or invisible child? Professionals' approaches to children whose father is violent to the mother ~ Maria Eriksson; "Take my father away from home": children growing up in the proximity of violence ~ Katarina Weinehall; Neglected issues in Swedish child protection policy and practice: age, ethnicity and gender ~ Keith Pringle; Tackling men's violence in families: lessons for England ~ Marianne Hester.

Tackling men's violence in families: Nordic

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    A Paperback / softback by Maria Eriksson, Marianne Hester, Suvi Keskinen

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      Publisher: Policy Press
      Publication Date: 22/06/2005
      ISBN13: 9781861346025, 978-1861346025
      ISBN10: 1861346026
      Also in:
      Domestic abuse

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Nordic countries are generally regarded as global welfare role models in terms of their image of being gender equal, child-friendly and culturally tolerant. Consequently, the influence of Nordic welfare systems in transnational academic and policy debates has been immense. By focusing on the vital welfare issue of violence by men to female partners and/or their children, this book seeks to reconsider this over-simplistic image. Drawing on new research from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, the book critically examines how men's violence in families is perceived and responded to in the Nordic context. It pays particular attention to the links between violence to women and violence to children, children's perspectives, professional discourses and responses, and legal and policy approaches. With clear links between research, policy and practice, the book is highly relevant to a wide audience, including academics, researchers and students in the fields of social work, health, criminology, sociology, social policy, gender studies, European studies and law. It is also recommended reading for welfare managers, practitioners, and policy makers.

      Trade Review
      "This book provides a welcome focus on men's violence, its family impact and what can be done about it. Lessons for UK academics and practitioners are both implicit and explicit, from the socio-legal context to the need for continued vigilance in the community. If enlightened countries such as those covered here cannot guarantee safety for women and children, then there is something about men's violent behaviour and society's sanctioning of it that we all need to think about and work to change. This book will help us along that road." Audrey Mullender, Principal, Ruskin College, Oxford

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Nordic issues and dilemmas ~ Maria Eriksson and Keith Pringle; Children, abuse and parental contact in Denmark ~ Marianne Hester; Commitments and contradictions: linking violence, parenthood and professionalism ~ Suvi Keskinen; "Talking feels like you wouldn't love Dad anymore": children's emotions, close relations and domestic violence ~ Hannele Forsberg; By-passing the relationship between fatherhood and violence in Finnish policy and research ~ Teija Hautanen; Marching on the spot? Dealing with violence against women in Norway ~ Wenche Jonassen; Children's peace? The possibility of the law to protect children by means of criminal law and family law ~ Gudrun Nordborg; A visible or invisible child? Professionals' approaches to children whose father is violent to the mother ~ Maria Eriksson; "Take my father away from home": children growing up in the proximity of violence ~ Katarina Weinehall; Neglected issues in Swedish child protection policy and practice: age, ethnicity and gender ~ Keith Pringle; Tackling men's violence in families: lessons for England ~ Marianne Hester.

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