Ending violence against women
Contributor(s): Heise, Lori L | Ellsberg, Mary | Gottemoeller, Megan.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Population Reports.Publisher: Baltimore, MD : Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Population Information Program, 1999Description: 43 pages ; 30 cm; electronic document (44 pages) ; PDF file: 1.11 MB.Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | PREVALENCE | REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH | STATISTICS | VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN | INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON | SEXUAL VIOLENCE | CHILD SEXUAL ABUSEOnline resources: Click here to access onlineItem type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Short paper | Family Violence library | TRVF000182 | Available | FV16080077 | |
Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON16080078 |
Population Reports, December 1999, Series L,no. 11
Highlights: What lies behind violence? -- Culture: a double-edged sword --
Child sexual abuse is widespread -- Violence harms women in many different ways -- Pullout guide: What Health Providers Can Do -- Responding to violence: Lessons learned. Contents:
Editors' Summary -- The World Takes Notice -- Intimate Partner Abuse -- Sexual Coercion -- Impact on Reproductive Health --
Threats to Health and Development -- Health Providers Play a Key Role -- An Agenda for Change -- Bibliography
"This issue of Population Reports focuses principally on two
types of violence: (1) abuse of women within marriage and
other intimate relationships and (2) coerced sex, whether
it takes place in childhood, adolescence, or adulthood.
This focus reflects the types of abuse most dominant in the
lives of women and girls around the world. Other forms of
abuse, such as trafficking in women, rape during war, female infanticide, and FGM, are also important. They are not included in this report, however, because they deserve separate consideration (see, for example, Population Reports,
Female Genital Mutilation: A Reproductive Health Concern, (Supplement to Series J, No.41, October 1995). Limiting the focus of the report to intimate partner violence and sexual coercion makes it possible to discuss these issues and appropriate program responses in more depth.' (From the Editor's summary). Record #5131