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Violence in the City of Women

Police and Batterers in Bahia, Brazil

Sarah Hautzinger

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University of California Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

Brazil's innovative all-female police stations, installed as part of the return to civilian rule in the 1980s, mark the country's first effort to police domestic violence against women. Sarah J. Hautzinger's vividly detailed, accessibly written study explores this phenomenon as a window onto the shifting relationship between violence and gendered power struggles in the city of Salvador da Bahia. Hautzinger brings together distinct voices—unexpectedly macho policewomen, the battered women they are charged with defending, indomitable Bahian women who disdain female victims, and men who grapple with changing pressures related to masculinity and honor. What emerges is a view of Brazil's policing experiment as a pioneering, and potentially radical, response to demands of the women's movement to build feminism into the state in a society fundamentally shaped by gender.

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Schlagwörter

men and women, in laws, police station, gender studies, ethnography, police officers, women police, masculinity, brazilian history, gender based violence, policewomen, brazil, all female police stations, womens movement, female victims, feminism, sex and gender, police, civilian rule, anthropology, brazilian culture, social structures, gendered power struggles, policing experiment, battered women, violence against women, violence, gendered violence, policing by women, salvador de bahia, domestic violence, policing for women