Do violent homes make violent extremists? How childhood experiences around domestic violence may be driving terrorism worldwide Laura Kropiunigg and Rafael Kropiunigg
By: Kropiunigg, Laura.
Contributor(s): Kropiunigg, Rafael.
Material type: BookPublisher: Women without Borders, 2022Description: electronic document (12 pages) ; PDF file.Subject(s): ATTITUDES | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | EXTREMISM | FAMILY VIOLENCE | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MISOGYNY | PERPETRATORS | VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN | INTERNATIONALOnline resources: Download the paper, PDF In: Policy paper, no. 4, November 2022Summary: Growing consensus that violent misogyny contributes considerably to the spread of violent extremism raises several key questions. Why has gender-based violence and discrimination been missing from the conversation around drivers of extremism for so long? How can we ensure that information lags and knowledge gaps are plugged and adequately addressed, in real time and with context in mind? Does the P/CVE practitioner environment offer clues and insights that could aid politicians and policy-shapers to avoid remaining in a perpetual loop of playing gender-policy-catch-up? This policy paper touches upon the above questions by exploring hidden gendered contributing factors and drivers leading to violence and extremism. In employing the Women without Borders ‘MotherSchools: Parenting for Peace’ Model as a case study example, it further proposes that domestic violence fuels dysfunctional family dynamics that can act as a significant push factor. (From the paper). Record #7944Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON22120004 |
Policy paper, no. 4, November 2022
Growing consensus that violent misogyny contributes
considerably to the spread of violent extremism raises
several key questions. Why has gender-based violence and discrimination been missing from the conversation around drivers of extremism for so long? How can we ensure that information lags and knowledge gaps are plugged and
adequately addressed, in real time and with context in mind? Does the P/CVE practitioner environment offer clues and insights that could aid politicians and policy-shapers to avoid remaining in a perpetual loop of playing gender-policy-catch-up?
This policy paper touches upon the above questions by exploring hidden gendered contributing factors and drivers leading to violence and extremism. In employing the Women without Borders ‘MotherSchools: Parenting for Peace’ Model as a case study example, it further proposes that domestic violence fuels dysfunctional family dynamics that can act as a significant push factor. (From the paper). Record #7944