Monday, March 18, 2013

Feminist Anxiety about Domestic Violence Against Men | The ...

By Jennifer Gaboury

VAWAThe Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) was recently reauthorized after an unexpected delay attributed, beyond now routine Republican obstructionism, to opposition to the extension of protections to groups including immigrants and Native American women. I?m interested in another exclusion that has sometimes been raised since the passage of the legislation in 1994, of intimate partner violence against men. In heterosexual couples, men do the most of the battering and women do far less. But even when it?s a small share of such instances, not only do all victims deserve recognition, there needs to be greater attention to reluctance to acknowledge violence committed by women. Discussion of domestic violence as something that men do to women, even where this is predominately the case, obscures the roots of the problem, treating violence as if it?s something natural ? even biologically ? associated with men, rather than something that is learned, bound up with the norms associated with masculinity, and often part of cycles of violence that need to be healed. Connecting men with violence also makes it difficult for people see men as victims who deserve support.

I?m interested not only in the resources that VAWA makes available, but the way that it provides a framework for thinking and talking about domestic violence. The National Task Force to End Domestic and Sexual Violence Against Women produced a fact sheet on VAWA that addresses ?the man question.? While legislation does provide some assistance to men, it should be understood in the context of where the victims of violence are understood to be ?overwhelmingly female? making up 84% and 86% of spousal and intimate partner violence respectively. But the story of the statistics here is complicated. Data on battered men are sometimes simply omitted even when the numbers are available. For example, a study commissioned that would accompany the Act?s first reauthorization in 1998 cites that each year there are 1.5 million women who are victims of domestic violence and 835,000 men. But President Bill Clinton?s remarks on the occasion reflect the way in which men are omitted from the larger social discussion, focusing on the impact to women and children of violence inside homes.

abusedemenPhilip Cook?s book Abused Men: The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence offers an account of the politics of statistics across four decades of research on intimate partner violence, chronicling the ways in which the battering of men is overlooked and under-discussed. Cook points out that women make up 20% of domestic violence arrests and, in the reissued version of the book released in 2009, shows how these figures have changed over time, reflecting reporting practices rather than a dramatic increase in the levels of violence. Cook cites a survey sponsored by the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration of abused women seeking shelter in Kentucky found that among violent couples, 38% of attacks were by ones where women reported that they had initiated a violent act.

Unsurprisingly, men are far less likely than women to report incidents where they have been injured as it might call into question the status of their manhood. For men who did not hit back, retaliate, or perform an evasive action, there remains an expectation among many of the men themselves that they should have been able to fend off what transpired. Counselors note that boys and men who have been the victims of violence have a hard time accepting the label of victim, tied to its feminized associations and difficulties men experience in being able to seek and accept help. When men do share their stories of abuse, it?s not uncommon for these accounts to produce anxiety, disbelief, and uncomfortable laughter. Some men recount having called a domestic violence hotline only to have their call treated as a prank.

One of the ways in which women?s acts of violence are explained is that they?re said to be acts of self-defense. And while in many cases this is true, one would have to systematically discount the testimonies of thousands of victims who report otherwise to believe this is the only context in which men are battered by women. The picture about women?s capacity for violence changes when taking into account domestic violence in lesbian relationships, mother?s physical abuse of their children, and women who commit sexual harassment in workplace.

  • Just over 11% of lesbians report incidents of domestic violence in their relationships; a quarter indicate a history of other forms of verbal and psychological abuse. What?s also known about violence in same sex relationships, as within communities of color, is the significant reluctance to report these issues, particularly when it involves punitive responses from the state. The fact of violence committed by same sex partners also complicates the premise of some group therapy that people are generally better off in ?safe spaces? segregated by sex.
  • About 80% of physical child abuse is committed by a child?s parent where mothers perpetrate 67% of acts of physical abuse against children; 40% of the time mothers act on their own and 17% the child is abused by both parents. There is a subset of scholarly literature which seeks to debunk the notion that women are ?more likely? to commit child abuse than men, when they spend similar time caring for children. This defensive posture in response to mothers committing violence seems connected to the idea that women need to be thought of only as victims and not sometimes also as perpetrators in order to be worthy of protection.
  • Recent data on sexual harassment in the workplace indicate that 70% of women and 45% of men have experienced some form of sexual harassment at work. Between 1992 and 2008, the percentage of sexual-harassment charges filed by men with the EEOC doubled from 8 percent to 16%; among the reasons for this spike is that in poor job markets, when people are unable to change jobs, some opt to report the incidents when they might not have otherwise. One of the problems with the EEOC data on sexual harassment is that the agency does not identify the sex of the harasser; other studies have demonstrated that women?s harassment of men constitutes between 10-15% of all cases and men?s harassment by another men is approximately 20%. Cases of women sexually harassing other women in the workplace can be identified, but there?s been little attention about this issue.

That there exists disparity in these numbers shouldn?t have the effect of erasing minority experiences. It?s understandable why there?s resistance to a framework which suggests that ?both men and women? are battered as if there is equivalence there, and fear that the recognition against men could mean a loss of scarce resources for women who do not, overall, have the same earning capacities of men. Domestic violence is intertwined with learned gender roles and histories of abuse, but too often such violence is treated as if it inherently male, but this account misunderstands and fails to get to the roots of such problems. Understanding violence as an extension of manhood is a problem for both women and men, limiting the ways in which we understand women?s strength, men?s vulnerabilities, and the capacity of all people to commit acts of abuse. Framing domestic violence in the way it?s currently understood means that some victims remain in the shadows, making it more difficult for those men, women, and children who are abused by women to be understood and receive help. There?s a kind of perverse and necessary equality in such recognition.

In the aftermath of the Abu Grahib scandal, Barbara Ehrenreich reflected on what Lynndie England?s crimes mean for feminists, of how the evidence of her misconduct in wide circulation meant kind of a loss of innocence about women committing acts of violence that should be accepted and mourned. The reconceptualization of domestic violence that takes stock of women?s acts requires giving up the idea of woman-partner-mother-sister (particularly of white women) as a uniformly innocent figure, a source of safety and care who is incapable of monstrous acts and cruelty outside of profound illness. The discomfort around the idea that women might be violent and men may need scarce resources as victims is, in many ways, an understandable reaction to the rates of violence that men commit, the failure to treat domestic violence and sexual harassment with the seriousness it deserves. Given that a fair share of the limited attention to intimate partner violence against men has been generated by anti-feminist men?s rights advocates, it?s all the more important to see a growing number of feminist-identified men?s organizations, such as such as Men Can Stop Rape and CONNECT, doing work to reach out to men to rethink masculinities and reduce violence. Another piece in this puzzle is to better address domestic violence in its many forms, knowing that doing so doesn?t mean a zero-sum gain for battered women.

__________________________________________

gabouryconference.jpg (2)Jennifer Gaboury is the Associate Director of the Women and Gender?Studies Program at Hunter College whose work currently focuses on the?relationship between rethinking masculinities and feminism. She is?proud to be currently serving as the chair of the Board of the Center?for Gay and Lesbian Studies (CLAGS).

Tags: domestic violence, intimate partner violence, Jennifer Gaboury, violence against men

Source: http://thefeministwire.com/2013/03/feminist-anxiety-about-domestic-violence-against-men/

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Mormon Church puts ad in Toronto musical programme

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints hopes patrons who see the runaway hit stage musical "The Book of Mormon" when it lands in Toronto next month will also check out the scripture that inspired it.

The church, which has no involvement in the edgy religious satire, has bought three full-page ads in the Mirvish Productions program for the show to encourage theatre-goers to read the actual "Book of Mormon."

"You've seen the play...now read the book," says one ad.

"I've read the book," reads another.

"The book is always better," concludes a third.

Each ad features an image of a smiling person and is anchored by a small image of the sacred text that Mormons believe is a companion volume of scripture to the Bible.

The ads also have a link to the church website ? thebookofmormon.org ? and a QR code that can be scanned by smartphones, which then take users to online information.

"I think most people, when they're going to the musical, they know that they're not going to see an accurate portrayal of what the Mormons believe or do," Sandra Pallin, national director for the church's Canada Public Affairs council, said in a telephone interview.

"The playbill advertisements are really just a way of inviting people that want to know more, showing them where they can get that information ... that there is accurate information available at these different resources, and those are provided in the playbill."

'South Park' creators behind musical

"South Park" masterminds Trey Parker and Matt Stone co-wrote "The Book of Mormon" along with "Avenue Q" co-creator Robert Lopez.

The song-and-dance story follows two young and naive Mormon missionaries as they try to share the book's scripture while visiting a Ugandan village ravaged by a brutal warlord.

In 2011, the stage show won nine Tony Awards ? including best musical ? on Broadway, where tickets are in hot demand.

The Mirvish website says tickets to the Toronto run from April 30 to June 9 at the Princess of Wales Theatre have already sold out.

Additional seats may occasionally become available closer to the performances, but chances are there won't be many Mormons lining up for them.

"Will members be going? Of course, the church leaves that up to everybody individually. There is no encouragement not to attend, of course, or to attend. That's a personal decision," said Pallin.

"But I don't think that most church members are going to consider going, mostly just because of some inappropriate content."

Fraser Tingle, a Calgary Mormon who writes the blogs canadianmormon.com and mormonfray.com, has the same prediction.

"I do think that there are going to be some members of the church who will be curious enough to buy tickets but I suspect the majority of Latter-day Saints are going to steer clear," said the 34-year-old, who works in communications and marketing and builds websites.

"In general, we prefer entertainment that is uplifting and tend to avoid entertainment that contains a surfeit of crude, sexual or scatalogical or violent or other vulgar content."

"In addition, this is our faith, or at least the tenets thereof, that are being held up for ridicule, which can be tough to laugh off sometimes, just because there are some things that we hold to be sacred, and when those are mocked it can be difficult," he added.

Still, while "The Book of Mormon" does have explicit language and satirizes organized religion, "the church has no interest in being defensive about it," said Pallin.

In fact, when the show started running on Broadway, the church's response was concise and collected.

"The production may attempt to entertain audiences for an evening, but the Book of Mormon as a volume of scripture will change people's lives forever by bringing them closer to Christ," reads the church's official statement on the show, issued in February 2011.

Church members will decide whether to see musical

"As a whole, I think the church statement really would be just because we're not protesting it, doesn't mean we condone it necessarily," said Pallin.

"However, again, it's up to people individually whether they want to see it or not."

Tingle applauds the church's unruffled approach to the show and hopes it will prompt patrons to look beyond the caricatures onstage.

"You're not going to see outraged protests or petitions or boycotts or anything," he said.

"It's not the first time that our religion has been mocked or ridiculed publicly, certainly particularly after this past election cycle in the U.S. (Republican Mitt Romney is Mormon), and it's not going to be the last."

"We do have a sense of humour about ourselves but more importantly, I think we aspire to an ethic of Christian civility in all of our interactions, and I think that includes turning the other cheek. And it is an opportunity to educate, I guess," added Tingle.

"I would hope, personally, that anyone who watched the play would recognize that the Mormonism that's depicted is like a funhouse mirror distorted version of something that's much more nuanced and complex."

According to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, there are about 185,000 members in Canada.

Source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2013/03/17/toronto-book-of-mormon-advertising-toronto-show.html?cmp=rss

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North Dakota Senate passes bill to make state 1st to ban abortions based on genetic defects

By Mark Lamport-Stokes INDIAN WELLS, California (Reuters) - Looking as though he had never been away, Rafa Nadal continued his impressive comeback with a high-quality 6-4 7-5 victory over Tomas Berdych in the semi-finals of the BNP Paribas Open on Saturday. The Spaniard, who returned to the ATP circuit only last month after seven months out with a left knee injury, broke the Czech once to take the opening set, then won a tense second set to improve his record this year to a career-best 16-1. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/north-dakota-senate-passes-bill-state-1st-ban-183438828.html

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Saturday, March 16, 2013

Insert Coin finalist: Make a Play Arduino-powered puppet show hands-on (video)

Insert Coin finalist Make a Play Arduinopowered puppet show handson video

Puppet shows and tech rarely ever mix so succinctly: Insert Coin finalist Gal Sasson has taken the ages-old art form and put it on a motorized stage powered by Arduino, making it more entertaining and interactive in the process. The product, dubbed Make a Play, consists of a stage and control board (complete with buttons, knobs and joysticks) all hooked into a nearby computer, and we had the chance to play around with it at Engadget Expand. After decorating the background and adding puppets and toys onto the stage, kids can control the lighting, move two motorized carts to change the position of each puppet and they can even turn on tiny LED lights attached to the toys. But it goes one step further: you can record all of the puppets' movements and audio associated with your play, which means that your creations can be played back and reproduced on the stage whenever you want. Gal is still working on his launch strategy, so pricing and availability have not been officially announced. We take the stage for a spin in the video and image gallery below, so take a closer look.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/16/insert-coin-finalist-make-a-play/

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GSP, Mark Hunt, Nick Diaz: Where did they fall on the hot or not list?

In a week that will end with a longheld grudge match at UFC 158, who showed up as the week's hottest?

[Related: Nick Diaz brings circus to town with GSP fight hype]

Hot ? Mark Hunt: The heavyweight went from being disappointed last week that he didn't get a bout with Junior dos Santos to getting that bout, and a possible title shot with a win.

Not ? TRT users in the UFC: Some fighters get exemptions for use of testosterone therapy in the UFC, but UFC president Dana White wants that to end quickly. Viewing the therapy as a form of cheating, White has vowed to reform it.

"If you put in a TRT exemption, we?re going to make sure you?re not using this much TRT and then showing up with this much," White said at the UFC 158 press conference. "So what that does is, the guys who do that, that are on TRT, their training camp is a lot easier than the guy who?s all natural. The bangs, the injuries, all the s--- that goes on, they?re recovering 10 times faster than the guy who?s not doing it. So we?re going to f---ing test these guys and make sure that?s not happening until TRT exemptions don?t happen anymore."

[Watch UFC 158 preview: St-Pierre, Diaz ready to rumble

Hot ? Maximum Fighting Championship: Want to make sure people pay attention to your fights? Put two brothers in the cage against each other. The Canadian promotion will have brothers fight each other in what's believed to be the first time in MMA.

Not ? Matt Riddle: He was cut by the UFC last week after a second positive test for marijuana after a fight. After his release, Riddle said the UFC is just looking to get rid of wrestlers and he wouldn't come back even if the UFC asked. White's response?

"He said if he was asked to get back in the UFC, he wouldn't come back. So yeah. I'll make it real easy for him. We just won't ask him. How's that?"

[Related: Order UFC 158 on Yahoo! Sports]

Still taking temperature ? Nick Diaz and Georges St-Pierre: Both fighters' tempers are hot right now. Diaz thinks St-Pierre is on steroids. St-Pierre spent most of the UFC 158 press conference being antagonized by Diaz. They'll get to take their frustrations out on each other on Saturday night, and we'll see who is truly hot.

NBA video from Yahoo! Sports:

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Forbes: The most overpaid college basketball coaches
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? Dodgers pitcher Zach Greinke feels 'pretty good' after throwing session
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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/gsp-mark-hunt-nick-diaz-where-did-fall-183248536--mma.html

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Friday, March 15, 2013

Scientists Confirm Higgs Boson Discovery (Voice Of America)

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Why There's No Mass Protest Over Government Surveillance

cispa-passes-houseThe Internet’s biggest organizations collectively rose up in outrage over a potential act of government censorship, yet have been conspicuously silent as Congress mulls sweeping new government surveillance authority. In 2012, most major websites staged a massive global blackout in protest of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), which would have granted authority to shut down websites associated with piracy. Yet as congress considers broad new sensitive data-sharing rules under the eerily named, Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), there is not even a hint of outrage. The deafening silence reveals a culture within Silicon Valley that cares far more about information than civil liberties. A Muted Meeting With Obama Over?Surveillance? According to those who attended a recent meeting between top tech CEOs and President Obama, the consensus was that the government should have a “light touch” over their data sharing practices. CISPA would grant immunity to top Internet sites for sharing personal information that aids authorities in combating malicious cyber threats. The bill’s original mandatory safety provisions have been slimmed down to voluntary guidelines after tech and business-friendly legislators blocked the requirements as overly-burdensome. But, on the subject of civil liberties, there seems to be little concern. Big Business Likes CISPA, But Why Other Big Orgs?? The legal entitlements to big companies make it easy to see why they have a vested interest in supporting CISPA, but why no outrage from other web organizations that protested SOPA? Alexis Ohanian, founder of the widely popular aggregator, Reddit, explained to me why he hasn’t seen the same reaction from his community over privacy concerns, “The big reason is the imminent threat of shutting down things we love (like reddit, all of social media etc) that sopa/pipa provided. Whereas the obliteration of 4th amendment rights to privacy online isn’t as blatant, sadly, so it’s harder to rally around,” he writes. Information Over Individualism However, Ohanian’s argument doesn’t fully explain the lack of outrage, given that the Internet community has risen up over other issues. When Washington D.C. tried to impose fees on beloved car-ride sharing service Uber, tech blogs and twitter lit were incensed. “Wow, a business (Uber) is prevented from lowering its prices.. wait.. what? We live in America, right?” tweeted Google Venture Partner, and Digg Co-Founder, Kevin Rose. The same Internet flash lobby has spontaneously organized over free access to academic research, a Wikipedia slander law in Malaysia, and

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_A8tIuE70Yw/

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