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22/09/03
Behind Closed Doors
Josie Appleton
Spiked-Online
A new government-backed campaign against domestic violence has hit the UK
media. The UK Sun yesterday launched a campaign to expose what it describes as
'Britain's hidden shame' - featuring shocking tales of six women who were beaten
at the hands of their partners (1).
Meanwhile, a new cinema advert, launched by the domestic violence campaign
group Refuge and backed by media-donated creative costs and advertising space,
shows a man slapping his partner in a restaurant while fellow diners look away
(2).
Yet the idea that domestic violence lurks behind many of the nation's bedroom
doors, tacitly accepted or quietly ignored, is a myth. The brutal actions of the
men highlighted in the Sun's campaign are so shocking precisely because they are
so rare.
We read of a woman kicked in the head 40 times and left with brain damage.
Another woman was beaten with an iron bar until she passed out, her skull
fractured, and required 20 stitches. According to Refuge's chief executive
Sandra Horley, 'such is the hidden shame of domestic violence in our society
that there are still people who do not realise that it is a crime'.
Nobody needs a campaign to tell them that such actions are crimes. Couples,
along with their friends and neighbours, know that hitting somebody with a bar
is both morally wrong and against the law. The men were all charged and punished
for what they did, and rightfully so. But these cases are not run-of-the-mill.
'[L]ook what goes on inside homes up and down the land', says the Sun
editorial: 'One woman in four has suffered domestic violence and two thirds of
children have seen their mums being attacked.'
This 'one in four' statistic has become widely accepted, but it is
misleading. One in four women has not been hit over the head with an iron bar.
In 1999 Home Office research found that one in four women had suffered from
'some form of violence' at the hands of her partner, but this included a broad
range of incidents (3).
The most common kind of assault counted in this study was 'pushing, shoving
and grabbing'. Forty-one per cent of victims were injured, and this injury was
in most cases restricted to bruising. Indeed, only 17 per cent of incidents
recorded in the survey were considered to be crimes by their victims, while only
a third of women victims agreed that their experience made them 'a victim of
domestic violence'.
The law is a blunt instrument for dealing with the murky world of personal
relationships
Other studies used even broader notions of 'domestic violence', including
'emotional and financial abuse', such as forcing your partner to do domestic
tasks or give you money.
Publicising statistics that blur the distinction between 'grabbing' and
violent assault does nobody any favours. It doesn't help victims of violent
abuse, such as those highlighted in the Sun's campaign. It also casts millions
of British men in the role of vicious abusers - and their partners as frightened
victims unable to speak out about their experiences.
In the end it is perhaps women, the supposed beneficiaries of these
campaigns, who come out worst. Like children, they are seen as incapable of
deciding whether an incident should be treated as a crime. It was reported today
that the police will be able to prosecute a male partner for domestic violence,
whether the woman likes it or not, using photographs of injuries to proceed with
a case if she decides not to press charges (4).
In fact, there is an inversion of reality going on here. Domestic violence
itself is rare, but awareness-raising campaigns about it are not. Warnings of
'hidden abuse' scream out at us from billboards, TV channels and newspapers -
though this kind of abuse is something that we rarely recognise in our own
lives. Far from being ignorant of the issue, we are overly aware of it.
Talk of the 'hidden epidemic' of domestic violence encourages the law to step
into homes up and down the land. It causes intimate relationships to be viewed
with suspicion, as potentially abusive. The Sun's campaign emphasised the fact
that these men had seemed 'charming' boyfriends and husbands - implying that,
however charming a man may appear, he has the potential to turn into a 'brute'.
If a brute is lurking inside every man, this invites the state to take a much
broader and proactive role in policing people's intimate lives.
However, the law is a blunt instrument for dealing with the murky world of
personal relationships. When women say that they didn't consider an incident of
violence as a crime, this is not necessarily because they were suffering from
'false consciousness' or low self-esteem. More likely, it reflects the fact that
we judge the actions of those close to us differently to those of strangers.
Of course, men who commit a violent assault against their partners are
criminals. Campaigns against domestic violence elide the distinction between
criminal behaviour and the often messy, blurry world behind the majority of
British front doors.
(1) Sun, 22 September 2003
(2)
Domestic violence campaign launched, ITV, 18 September 2003
(3)
Domestic Violence: findings from a new British Crime Survey self-completion
questionnaire, Catriona Mirrlees-Black, Home Office Research Study, 1999
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