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El. knyga: Religion and Gender-Based Violence: Global and Local Responses to Harmful Practices

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"This book takes religion as an entry point for a deeper exploration into why practices of gender-based violence continue, and what possible actions might help to contribute to their eradication. International donors are committed to reducing and ending gender-related harm, particularly violence against women, but clear answers as to why harmful practices persist are often slow to emerge. Theological research struggles to find strong links, yet religion is often referred to by local people as the reason for practices such as female cutting, male circumcision, early and forced marriage, nutritional taboos and birth practices, mandatory (un-)veiling, harmful spiritual practices, polygamy, gender unequal marital and inheritance rights and so-called honour crimes. This book presents empirical cases of religious, non-religious and secular actors, including local and international governmental and non-governmental agencies in the fields of development, health and equality policies. Tracing their different understandings of how religion is entangled with gender-based violence both contextually as well as historically, the book sheds light on helpful and unhelpful as well as erroneous and harmful understandings of such practices in local and global perspectives.Centralizing the perspectives of women themselves, this book will be an important read for development practitioners and policy makers, as well as for researchers across religious studies, gender studies, and global development"--

This book takes religion as an entry point for a deeper exploration into why practices of gender-based violence continue, and what possible actions might help to contribute to their eradication. It presents empirical cases of religious, non-religious and secular actors.

This book takes religion as an entry point for a deeper exploration into why practices of gender-based violence continue and what possible actions might help to contribute to their eradication.

International donors are committed to reducing and ending gender-related harm, particularly violence against women, but clear answers as to why harmful practices persist are often slow to emerge. Theological research struggles to find strong links, yet religion is often referred to by local people as the reason for practices such as female cutting, male circumcision, early and forced marriage, nutritional taboos and birth practices, mandatory (un)veiling, harmful spiritual practices, polygamy, gender unequal marital and inheritance rights and so-called honour crimes. This book presents empirical cases of religious, non-religious and secular actors, including local and international governmental and non-governmental agencies in the fields of development, health and equality policies. Tracing their different understandings of how religion is entangled with gender-based violence both contextually as well as historically, the book sheds light on helpful and unhelpful as well as erroneous and harmful understandings of such practices in local and global perspectives.

Centralising the perspectives of women themselves, this book will be an important read for development practitioners and policy makers, as well as for researchers across religious studies, gender studies, and global development.



This book takes religion as an entry point for a deeper exploration into why practices of gender-based violence continue, and what possible actions might help to contribute to their eradication. It presents empirical cases of religious, non-religious and secular actors.

Chapter
1. Gender, Religion, and Harm: Conceptual and Methodological
Reflections. Brenda Bartelink, Chia Longman, & Tamsin Bradley
Chapter
2. The
Impact of Covid on Efforts to Reduce FGM and Child Marriage: Understanding
the intersections between Religion, Gender, and Culture. Tamsin Bradley and
Jane Rita Meme
Chapter
3. Cousin Marriage Among Turkish and Moroccan Dutch:
Debates on Medical Risk and Forced Marriage Oka Storms & Edien Bartels
Chapter
4. The Implications of the Securitisation of Mosques for
Transformative Masculine Attitudes Towards Harmful Cultural Practices in the
UK Tamsin Bradley and Ottis Mubaiwa
Chapter
5. Izzat and Forced Marriage in
the Constructing of Cultural and Religious Identities in the UK Sukhbinder
Hamilton
Chapter
6. Harm and Consent in the Socio-Legal Perspectives on Child
Marriage in Iran Ladan Rahbari
Chapter
7. Understanding the Nexus of
Religion, Secularism, and the Harms of Womens Mandatory Un/Covering Sarah
Fischer
Chapter
8. Normative Violence, Traditional Healing, and Harm
Regarding Same-Sex Relations Among Women in Mozambique Maria Judite
Chipenembe , Chia Longman , & Gily Coene
Chapter
9. The Contradictory Role of
the Protestant Church in Changing Female Genital Cutting Among the Maasai: An
Ethnographic Exploration Hannelore Van Bavel
Chapter
10. So Is It All Just
About Sex? Religion and Recognising Harmful Practices in the Need to Control
Female Sexuality Elisabet le Roux
Chapter
11. 'Faith-full' Reflections from a
Civically Minded, Radically Inclusive, Other Azza Karam
Brenda Bartelink is assistant professor at the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Groningen Netherlands.

Chia Longman is associate professor of Gender Studies and the director of the Centre for Research on Culture and Gender, Ghent University, Belgium.

Tamsin Bradley is professor of International Development at the University of Portsmouth, UK.