|
 |
|
Item 1 of 1
using search terms:
|
|
Back |
|

|
Empowerment through activism: responding to domestic violence in the South Asian Community in London
JOURNAL: Gender & Development
VOLUME: 12 ISSUE: 1
THEME: Diversity
Abstract |
AUTHOR:
Aisha Gill Gulshun Rehman
EDITED BY:
Caroline Sweetman
ISSN: 1355-2074 E-ISSN: 1364-9221 STOCK CODE: 002J1122
AVAILABILITY:
Available online only
PUBLISHER: Routledge
FORMAT:
Downloadable PDF
(pp: 8)
PUBLISHED:
May 2004
READERSHIP:
Activists and Campaigners, Postgraduate, Undergraduate, Professional and Practitioners,
Read this article online (PDF file)
|
ABSTRACT
This article focuses on South Asian women's activism, and its impact on diversity and social development in South Asian communities in east London. It discusses the experience of the Newham Asian Women's Project (NAWP), which is committed to secure social justice for women and children escaping domestic violence. The article examines the tensions between the global phenomenon of violence against women and women's specific experiences of violence in different cultural settings. There is a parallel tension between universal responses to violence as a human-rights violation, and more culturally situated approaches. The article emphasises the ways in which NAWP's work addresses gender, race, and class-based inequality, using participatory approaches to empower women and direct the strategy of the organisation. For South Asian women in Newham, activism emerges out of their everyday resistances to oppression, which are based on ideas of community and family.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not
necessarily reflect the policies of Oxfam GB

|
|
|