LIVING WITH INSECURITY: SEXUAL VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN OF NORTH EAST
Mannat Singh Student: BA. LLB University School of Law and Legal Studies (USLLS) Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University Delhi 110078 Email: mannatsingh2500@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
North eastern women who come to Delhi to work or for academic pursuits encounter cruel and uncouth behaviour from uncivilised people of Delhi. They are racially discriminated because of their distinctive features and sexually abused because of their vulnerability. This study focuses on discussing the sexual harassment and sexual violence that the north eastern women have been facing in Delhi, causes that are responsible for such happening and various aspects related to this issue.
The study was initially planned on a sample of 100 north eastern women residing in Delhi, however the researcher could contact only 92 women. A questionnaire was administered to them individually contacting them through snowball method. The results showed that, 96% women
When my roommate was in elementary school, the boys in her grade would not let her play sports with her. The reason they gave her was that she was a girl, and sports were not for girls. She was told that she was not strong enough to play, and that sports were a boy thing. They then told her to go play house or kiss tag. When they said that, she proceeded to beat the boys up, making them look like the ones who weren’t strong. While violence is not the way to prove someone wrong, this story has a point. Taylor wanted to play basketball, but she was told she couldn’t because she was a girl. This might seem like innocent children making assumptions, but this is where it begins. These children will grow into adults that watch movies like Pixel, where the woman who is objectified is literally turned into an object, watch television shows like Two and a Half Men, which glorifies the manipulation and sexual conquest of women, and read books like Lolita and take it seriously. This idea, while developed in other places as well, is created through the media.
In A Thousand Splendid Suns, men do not hate women, in fact, the author shows women’s oppression and physical abuse are rooted in the society. For instance, wearing burqa symbolized the beginning of women’s oppression in the Islamic culture. In the novel, Rasheed says, ‘“I’m a different breed of man, Mariam. Where I come from, one wrong look, one proper word, and blood is spilled. Where I come from, a woman’s face is her husband’s business only. I want you to remember that. Do you understand?”’ (70). When Rasheed says these words to Mariam, it shows that Rasheed is traditionalist, has a conservative mind and is oppressing Mariam in every movements and words of her and one wrong mistake, she will be punish by him. In other words, his words means that Mariam is now a married woman, her body belongs only to him and it also shows she has no power and no equal rights as him. In Islamic culture, there’s a belief that men own women once they are married and that her everything belong only to them. Upon reading the novel, the readers can see that there are physical abuses which occurred to women and show that women are not allow to self-defend themselves from the abuse. In Chapter 8 Part 1, it foreshadows that physical abuse is a most common occurrence in the Islamic culture. For instance, the narrator says, “Mariam’s hands shook when she tried to slip the band onto his finger, and Rasheed had to help her. Her own band was a little tight, but Rasheed had no trouble forcing it over
be used to look at sexual and domestic violence, especially when considering colonial relationships, which are “themselves gendered and sexualized” (8). Smith closely examines this specific relationship between the colonists and Native American women. The colonists’ oppression of Native women influences perception of indigenous women’s behavior, beliefs, and views. This oppression acts on racial, gender, and sexual levels and also dictates the treatment of Native women. As Winona LaDuke writes in her foreword to this text, “as a Native woman, you always know that you will be viewed as a woman of color, hence your politics will be race based, you analysis marginalized, and your experience seen as limited” (xvii). Colonial based oppression has taken over the lives of Native people, until it exerts an influence—such as the one mentioned by LaDuke—in all areas of their culture and lives. Racism and oppression have, as Smith argues, become a “part of the social fabric” (8). According to Smith, racism is utilized as a method to eradicate certain enemies of the state; in this case, Native Americans. This erasure can be seen through the seeming “absence” of indigenous people. Smith states that “Native peoples are a permanent ‘present absence’ in the U.S. colonial imagination, an ‘absence’ that reinforces at every turn the conviction that Native people are indeed
Violence against women and girls is one of the most widespread human rights violations. It stems from social structures and traditions rather than individual random acts. It cuts across age, socio-economic, educational and geographic boundaries; affects all societies, and is a major obstacle to ending gender inequality and discrimination globally. The violence women face can be physical, sexual, verbal, and any other form that abuses power and control, which can make them feel insignificant. With dealing with all these negative aspects of violence why is it the case that women continue to stay? In Gender and Women’s Studies in Canada: Critical Terrain by Margaret Hobbs and Clara Rice, there are eight key reasons why women would stay in an abusive
Objectives :- to assess the magnitude of sexual violence and its adverse RH outcome on house maids, & to compare the adverse RH outcomes on sexually violated & non violated maids. A cross-sectional analytical study was conducted among 523 house maids in Hawassa. After the quantitative data was collected using self-administered questionnaire data was
The first key question that the authors Alaggia, Regehr &Rishchynski, (2009) are to figure out that how come there is not addressed the domestic violence and continue to persist as a social problem affecting a large number of Canadian Women. The authors are trying to answer this question giving some statistics, how the women are abused from their partner, such as the violence reported when the relationship is ended, and is some other case the violence starts after the separation.
With a rape happening at regular intervals in the United States, calling assault a significant issue is just putting it gently. Today's era was brought up in a society that has driven numerous individuals to accept that, in certain occasions, an assault is okay. It has turned into a social standard in numerous nations, most dominatingly in the United States. From a youthful age, young ladies are taught to not get assaulted as opposed to young men being taught not to assault. This is all a piece of assault society. Assault society is the social standardization of assault. It is the externalization of ladies and the animalization of men. Assault society lets us know that "young men will be young men" and there is nothing that
Utterly in love and best friends since the eighth grade two juniors decided to take a chance and become a couple. The night of their first official date, the hopeless romantic had butterflies in her stomach, daydreaming of the perfect night that lay ahead. Soon after he picked her up, they went to her favorite restaurant and afterwards headed to the boy’s house to spend quality time together. As the girl tried to kiss the boy, she quickly grew uncomfortable as he began sadistically taking advantage of the young female. The word “no” repeated more times than fathomable. Ignoring her plea and the tears flooding down her face the wanton boy simply stated, “it’s going to be okay” and continued undressing the girl and performing vulgar sexual tasks. After the boy had taken what he want, the girl’s innocence and virginity, he finally allowed her to go home. A year has now passed since the incident and since they last had any type of interaction. When telling the story to spread awareness peers reply with, “You willingly went to his house you must have had the same intentions” or call her a lying slut and come to the
Through the past few years more and more women consider themselves feminist and for good reason. Women have been oppressed for years and have made some progress to where we want to be. Sure we can vote and own property but we are still experiencing gender inequality, we have unnecessary gender labels on everyday items, making excuses for rape culture and our reproductive rights are in jeopardy.
The chapter on violence against women reminded me of chapter 3 and the arguments concerning why men commit more crime than women. Chapter 3 briefly mentioned how we raise boys to be assertive and dominant while we raise girls to be the opposite. In order to break the cycle and curb violence against women, we have to start at home with parents. Many of us are guilty of following and passing down the same gender rules/roles that have been the norm for years, but it’s those same rules/roles that teach young boys that it’s acceptable to be forceful towards girls and that it’s acceptable to be aggressive to get what you want. Meanwhile, we teach girls that they have to be careful of their actions, fearful of situations, and cautious of the men around
Domestic violence has been a main issue throughout history and all over the world; it can evidentially affect children, the elderly, women, and even men. Although abuse can affect many individuals, a significant portion of domestic abuse cases are against women. Globally, women are constantly facing physical, social and mental abuse by men and/or their significant others. In past years, the issue of domestic violence has gained the attention of researchers. In fact, studies have shown that it is a global issue negatively impacting the social and health status of individuals, particularly women. A survey of domestic abuse in Canada signifies that 29% of married women have been abused by their partners at least once (Nwosu, 2006). Many argue
This study sought to determine the perception of the residents on the social acceptability of the various forms and prevalence of violence against women. The study supposed that when people perceived the various forms of violence against women as socially acceptable, their prevalence tends to be high.
“People dominate animals, men dominate women.” Each is a relation of hierarchy, an inequality, with particularities and variations within and between them. (Cite Orange book pg. 92.) For centuries, women have been viewed and used as a man’s “property”, whether it is being used for sexual satisfaction or for the sake of bearing children and taking care of the home. Men are typically perceived as head of the household and whatever they say goes; anything to satisfy their hunger for power and control. Have women ever had a say about what they want to use their bodies for? Laws against rape may have changed over time, but men’s consistent aggressive behavior unfortunately, has not.
Most people think that rape is about sex but it is not. If rape was about getting sex the person would just go and have sex with someone who wants to give it to them. Paying for sex is better than going out and raping someone. Rape is also called sexual assault. Rape is about having power and control over someone. Rape is defined as one person forcing another person, without his or her consent and using violence or threatening violence, to have intercourse or other forms of sexual activity. Usually when people hear about rape they think of a man raping a woman, but rape can happen to anyone. It is one of the worst things that can happen to someone. Some people think that rape is
Introduction:- Violence affects the lives of millions of women worldwide in all socio-economic & educational classes. It cuts across