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Racialising domestic violence: Islamophobia and the Australian forced marriage debate

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 09:21 authored by Chloe PattonChloe Patton
Amid claims that forced marriage is rife in Australia's minority communities, 2013 saw the introduction of criminal legislation outlawing forced marriage in Australia. Within public debate, this punitive measure came to overshadow all other modes of addressing the problem; for instance, education programmes, civil legislation and targeted domestic violence support services. This article examines print media coverage of forced marriage over the thirteen-year period leading up to the introduction of criminal legislation. Exploring a discourse that overwhelmingly understands forced marriage as a problem of Islam and multiculturalism, and that marginalises the experiences of women and service providers, the author identifies distinct conservative and liberal representations of forced marriage which racialise domestic violence. Conservatives maintain that forced marriage is empirical evidence of an impending Muslim 'takeover' of the West precipitated by multiculturalism. Liberals reassert the importance of western values through specific criminal legislation to temper male minority ethnic violence. The material consequence of these Orientalist framings is a narrowing of services available to women seeking to escape violence. The article seeks to understand the processes of meaning-making in which forced marriage is implicated and how the issue is situated within the domain of national political ideology, as opposed to family violence.

History

Journal

Race and Class

Volume

60

Issue

2

Start page

21

End page

39

Total pages

19

Publisher

Sage Publications Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2018 Institute of Race Relations

Former Identifier

2006088874

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-02-21

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