1st Edition
Interconnecting the Violences of Men Continuities and Intersections in Research, Policy and Activism
This book aims to expand and enrich understandings of violences by focusing on gendered continuities, interconnections and intersections across multiple forms and manifestations of men’s violence. In actively countering, both, the compartmentalisation of studies of violence by ‘type’ and form, and the tendency to conceptualise violence narrowly, it aims to flesh out – not delimit – understandings of violence.
Bringing together cross-disciplinary, indeed transdisciplinary, perspectives, this book addresses how –what are often seen as – specific and separate violences connect closely and intricately with wider understandings of violence, how there are gendered continuities between violences and how gendered violences take many forms and manifestations and are themselves intersectional. Grounded by the recognition that violence is, itself, a form of inequality, the contributors to this volume traverse the intersectional complexities across, both, experiences of violent inequality, and what is seen to ‘count’ as violence.
The international scope of this book will be of interest to students and academics across many fields, including sociology, criminology, psychology, social work, politics, gender studies, child and youth studies, military and peace studies, environmental studies and colonial studies, as well as practitioners, activists and policymakers engaged in violence prevention.
1. Interconnecting the violences of men: Continuities and intersections in research, policy, and activism
Kate Seymour, Bob Pease, Sofia Strid and Jeff Hearn
2. What’s in a name? Theorising the inter-relationships of gender and violence
Karen Boyle
3. (De)Culturalising the problem of men’s violences: The case of online debates on violence committed by migrant men
Tuija Virkki and Satu Venäläinen
4. Men's violences in relation to children and young people's lives
Maria Eriksson and Keith Pringle
5. Violences in children’s and young people’s lives: Continuities and contradictions in counteracting the violence
Linnéa Bruno
6. Violence against gay/homosexual men and trans women as ‘failed men’
Stephen Tomsen
7. Men’s anti-queer violence: The enduring impact of colonial era sex and gender binaries
Karen Graaff
8. Dilemmas, pained frustration, and new possibilities: Masculinities, violences, and disabilities
Henri Myrttinen, Nurseli Yeşim Sünbüloğlu, and Yandisa Sikweyiya
9. Reframing the narrative: The processes and outcomes of men’s victimization in human trafficking
Polina Smiragina-Ingelström
10. Rethinking the gendering of agency in male suicide: More-than-human connections in violence against the self
Katrina Jaworski
11. Gendered entanglements of men’s violence against the self and violence against women
Denise Buiten
12. The violences of settler colonialism and the maintenance of the heteropatriarchal social order
Sarah Maddison and Julia Hurst
13. Men, war, and logics of practicality: The interlinkage between gender constructions and individual violence
Hendrik Quest
14. Men’s violence and environmental destruction: What are the connections?
Stephen R. Burrell
15. Men, masculinities and violence against non-human animals: Towards an intersectional approach
Kadri Aavik
16. Epistemic violence: An analytical tool for theorising interconnection of violences
Moira Pérez and Amalín Ramos-Mesa
17. Interconnecting violences for research, policy and activism: Concluding reflections
Jeff Hearn, Sofia Strid, Bob Pease and Kate Seymour
Biography
Kate Seymour is a senior social work academic and criminologist at Flinders University, South Australia, whose work focuses on the socio-cultural contexts for violence. Her research builds on her own experience in direct practice with men who use violence as well as her theoretical grounding across the fields of social work and criminology. Her recent book, with Sarah Wendt and Kris Natalier, Responding to Domestic Violence: Difficult Conversations, was published in 2023.
Bob Pease is an honorary professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at Deakin University and an adjunct professor in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Tasmania. He has published extensively on masculinity politics and critical social work practice. His most recent books include Undoing Privilege (revised edition) (2022) and Posthumanism and the Man Question: Beyond Anthropocentric Masculinities, co-editor (2023).
Sofia Strid is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Strid has worked extensively on developing concepts, methodologies and policy for theorising, measuring and preventing gender-based violence. Her work has been published in Journal of European Social Policy, Journal of Sex Research, Politics and Governance, Social Politics, Social Problems, Sociology, Theory and Society, and Violence against Women.
Jeff Hearn is Professor Emeritus, Hanken School of Economics, Finland; Senior Professor, Human Geography, Orebro University, Sweden; and Professor of Sociology, University of Huddersfield, UK. Recent books include Digital Gender-Sexual Violations, with Matthew Hall and Ruth Lewis (2022), and Routledge Handbook on Men, Masculinities and Organizations, co-edited with Kadri Aavik, David L. Collinson and Anika Thym (2024).