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"What's the problem?" Australian public policy constructions of domestic and family violence

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 06:09 authored by Suellen MurraySuellen Murray, Anastasia PowellAnastasia Powell
The campaign of feminists to have domestic violence formally acknowledged as a key issue affecting Australian women succeeded in the early 1980s when governments began developing policy seeking to address the problem. Far from simply adopting feminist gendered understandings of domestic violence, however, the development of contemporary policy responses to this issue has been influenced by a number of competing discourses about the problem, its causes, and possible solutions. Drawing on Bacchi's policy analysis approach, the authors compare the discursive constructions of domestic violence inherent in how the issue is named, framed, and defined across contemporary Australian policy documentsThe campaign of feminists to have domestic violence formally acknowledged as a key issue affecting Australian women succeeded in the early 1980s when governments began developing policy seeking to address the problem. Far from simply adopting feminist gendered understandings of domestic violence, however, the development of contemporary policy responses to this issue has been influenced by a number of competing discourses about the problem, its causes, and possible solutions. Drawing on Bacchi's policy analysis approach, the authors compare the discursive constructions of domestic violence inherent in how the issue is named, framed, and defined across contemporary Australian policy documents.

History

Journal

Violence Against Woman

Volume

15

Issue

5

Start page

532

End page

552

Total pages

21

Publisher

Sage Publications, Inc.

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2009 Sage Publications.

Former Identifier

2006011866

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-10-14