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“If you don’t stop the cycle somewhere, it just keeps going” : resilience in the context of structural violence and gender-based violence in rural Ontario Tara Mantler, Julia Yates, Katie J. Shillington, Panagiota Tryphonopoulos and Kimberley T. Jackson

By: Mantler, Tara.
Contributor(s): Yates, Julia | Shillington, Katie J | Tryphonopoulos, Panagiota | Jackson, Kimberley T.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: PLoS Global Public Health.Publisher: PLoS, 2024Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ECONOMIC ASPECTS | HOUSING | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | RESILIENCE | RURAL AREAS | SUPPORT SERVICES | VICTIM/SURVIVORS' VOICES | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERNATIONAL | CANADA | ONTARIOOnline resources: DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0002775 (Open access) In: PLoS Global Public Health, 2024, First published online, 11 January 2024Summary: Bolstering women’s resilience in the context of gender-based violence (GBV) requires attention to structural conditions needed to support women to thrive, particularly in rural communities. This cross-sectional study explored how resilience was influenced by structural violence in rural Ontario among women experiencing GBV (n = 14) and service providers in the GBV sector (n = 12). Interviews were conducted and revealed forms of structural violence that undermine resilience for women experiencing GBV in rural communities, including 1) housing- gentrification, short-term rentals of residential properties, and long waitlists, 2) income- fighting for enough money to survive, 3) safety- abusers gaming the system, and 4) access- successes and new barriers. Structural conditions must be attended to as they are prerequisites required to build resilience. (Authors' abstract). Record #8490
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PLoS Global Public Health, 2024, First published online, 11 January 2024

Bolstering women’s resilience in the context of gender-based violence (GBV) requires attention to structural conditions needed to support women to thrive, particularly in rural communities. This cross-sectional study explored how resilience was influenced by structural violence in rural Ontario among women experiencing GBV (n = 14) and service providers in the GBV sector (n = 12). Interviews were conducted and revealed forms of structural violence that undermine resilience for women experiencing GBV in rural communities, including 1) housing- gentrification, short-term rentals of residential properties, and long waitlists, 2) income- fighting for enough money to survive, 3) safety- abusers gaming the system, and 4) access- successes and new barriers. Structural conditions must be attended to as they are prerequisites required to build resilience. (Authors' abstract). Record #8490