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Daughters inside : toward a theory of structural sexual violence against girls through male mass incarceration Antje Deckert

By: Deckert, Antje.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Violence Against Women.Publisher: Sage, 2020Subject(s): CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE | CHILDREN OF PRISONERS | MĀORI | PRISONERS | VICTIMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE | MAUHERE | RANGAHAU MĀORI | RAWEKE TAMARIKI | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/1077801219886379 In: Violence Against Women, 2020, 26(15-16): 1897-1918Summary: Indigenous women constitute the fastest growing segment of the prison population. Women inside have disproportionately experienced childhood sexual abuse (CSA). A key protective factor against CSA is living with both biological parents. Imprisonment removes fathers from daughters’ homes. Yet, the link between male incarceration and girls’ risk of CSA remains unexamined. A quantitative exploration of this risk in Aotearoa New Zealand, indicates that the disproportionate incarceration of Māori fathers in the 1980s exposed Māori daughters to a 5.5 times greater CSA risk. A theory of sexual structural violence through male mass incarceration may help explain high CSA victimization rates among Māori girls and incarcerated women, and the sudden increase of young Indigenous women behind bars. More qualitative research is required to verify this empirical exploration. (Author's abstract). Record #6892
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Violence Against Women, 2020, 26(15-16): 1897-1918

Indigenous women constitute the fastest growing segment of the prison population. Women inside have disproportionately experienced childhood sexual abuse (CSA). A key protective factor against CSA is living with both biological parents. Imprisonment removes fathers from daughters’ homes. Yet, the link between male incarceration and girls’ risk of CSA remains unexamined. A quantitative exploration of this risk in Aotearoa New Zealand, indicates that the disproportionate incarceration of Māori fathers in the 1980s exposed Māori daughters to a 5.5 times greater CSA risk. A theory of sexual structural violence through male mass incarceration may help explain high CSA victimization rates among Māori girls and incarcerated women, and the sudden increase of young Indigenous women behind bars. More qualitative research is required to verify this empirical exploration. (Author's abstract). Record #6892