More women are turning to shelters, and the jobs crisis is part of the problem.
In late April, the Police Executive Research Forum released
a new survey finding that police officers are encountering more cases
of domestic violence as the economy continues to struggle. In 2010, 40
percent of the agencies in the survey reported an increase in domestic
violence calls; this year, that number has risen to 56 percent. Numbers
from women’s shelters, released by the Mary Kay Foundation,
are even more alarming. 78 percent of shelters have seen a rise in the
numbers of women seeking help, and 58 percent report that the abuse they
are seeing has become more violent.
These numbers seem shocking, but in fact, we’ve known about the
connection between abuse, economic stress and poverty for a very long
time. But it’s rarely covered by media. I’d argue that this is in part
because doing so requires us to stop adhering to prescribed boundaries –
“economic issues” versus “women’s issues,” psychology versus politics –
and to start making connections.
Read on...
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