Abstract

Engaging men has now become part of established global efforts to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG), with most interventions focusing on making men’s behaviors and attitudes more gender equitable. While scholarship on male allies has demonstrated the nature of their transformations and motivations, less attention has been paid to their negotiations of masculinity, privilege, the intersection between subjecthood and social contexts, and how these inform their engagements with women activists’ anti-violence work in their communities. We explore questions of men’s engagement in this article, which is based on a pilot ethnographic study with male allies in a VAWG prevention program in the informal settlements of Dharavi in Mumbai, India. We found that while men are able to acquire “knowledge” and “awareness” through the intervention, it produces an individuating effect wherein the structural nature of VAWG is obscured due to an emphasis on men’s individual traits. This further informs participants’ understanding of masculinity, which is marked by ambivalence as men negotiate multiple hegemonic masculinities and socioeconomic anxieties. One reason for this is that interventions with men are unable to destabilize public–private boundaries in informal settlements, which continue to treat VAWG as “private matters.” We discuss the implications for local and global responses to engender accountability among male allies.

Highlights

  • Engaging men has become part of established global efforts to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG), with most interventions focusing on making men’s behaviors and attitudes more gender equitable

  • The field of men’s and masculinity studies has grown considerably since the 1980s (Brod and Kaufman 1994; Chopra 2007; Connell 2005; Kaufman 1987), but global research on engaging men in violence prevention has been sparse until the last decade, most research coming from feminist and women’s groups and nongovernment organizations (NGOs)

  • We present findings from an ethnographic pilot study with male allies involved in a violence prevention program in the informal settlements of Dharavi in Mumbai, India

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Summary

Introduction

Engaging men has become part of established global efforts to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG), with most interventions focusing on making men’s behaviors and attitudes more gender equitable. The field of men’s and masculinity studies has grown considerably since the 1980s (Brod and Kaufman 1994; Chopra 2007; Connell 2005; Kaufman 1987), but global research on engaging men in violence prevention has been sparse until the last decade, most research coming from feminist and women’s groups and nongovernment organizations (NGOs). C. Macomber 2012; Peacock and Barker 2014)

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