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Journal Article

Citation

Miniker JC, Snider L. Can. J. Criminol. Crim. Justice 2006; 48(5): 753-780.

Affiliation

Grant MacEwan College; Department of Sociology, Queen’s University

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Canadian Criminal Justice Association, Publisher University of Toronto Press)

DOI

10.1353/ccj.2006.0053

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The original problem of 'wife abuse,' which feminists constituted in the 1970s, has morphed into 'domestic violence' and then into 'husband abuse.' We present a case study of the newly discovered problem of 'husband abuse,' which we argue exemplifies the complexities of neo-liberalism, neo-conservatism and feminist engagement with the criminal justice state. We argue that the myth that men are battered as often as women, an argument that challenges decades of feminist research, theory and activism, is constitutive of a backlash against women’s safety and feminist 'victories.' We caution that such claims must be read as more than anti-feminist backlash, but are increasingly becoming the new “common sense,” the dominant lens used by policy-makers, media and influential interest groups. We demonstrate how the very successes of feminism, combined with neo-liberal governance, the burgeoning power of men’s movements and new communication media, have given rise to new subjects, mentalities and practices. As the claim that male and female partners are equally prone to violence resonates with discourses of equality and reinforces constituencies promoting criminal justice “solutions” to all social problems the result is equality with a vengeance.

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