Abstract

Abuse and violence against women is not only a serious violation of human rights, but is also, according to the Swedish government, the most acute and greatest obstacle to a gender-equal society. The aim of the current study was to investigate discourses that govern social work practice in Sweden analysed discourses of violence against women in five Swedish public working guidelines using Carol Bacchi’s social constructivist analytical approach What's the Problem Represented to Be? Our findings show that violence is framed in the guidelines within a heterosexual context and is represented as an individual problem of women within close relations and families. This framing also promotes a division between violence against Swedish-born women and violence against foreign-born women. The analysis also shows that equality seems to be more about the inclusion of men rather than looking after women's situations. How violence against women is understood will affect how violence can be predicted, prevented, and treated, and thus there is a risk that these representations might affect women subjected to violence differently depending on how social workers interpret and apply these guidelines. Our findings also suggest that these representations maintain gender hierarchies and other structural and societal inequalities and ignore violence against women as a major global social problem.

Highlights

  • Abuse and violence against women is a serious violation of human rights, but is according to the Swedish government, the most acute and greatest obstacle to a gender-equal society

  • The aim of the current study was to investigate discourses that govern social work practice in Sweden analysed discourses of violence against women in five Swedish public working guidelines using Carol Bacchi’s social constructivist analytical approach What's the Problem Represented to Be? Our findings show that violence is framed in the guidelines within a heterosexual context and is represented as an individual problem of women within close relations and families

  • In order to provide an alternative picture of how the discourses in the working guidelines can be understood, I theorised on what these representations hide, the possible consequences of this ignorance, and who most likely will benefit from these representations

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Summary

Introduction

Abuse and violence against women is a serious violation of human rights, but is according to the Swedish government, the most acute and greatest obstacle to a gender-equal society. Our findings show that violence is framed in the guidelines within a heterosexual context and is represented as an individual problem of women within close relations and families This framing promotes a division between violence against Swedish-born women and violence against foreign-born women. Nuestros resultados verifican que estas representaciones reproducen inequidades estructurales y jerarquías de género ignorando la violencia contra las mujeres como un importante problema social global. Abuse and violence against women is a serious violation of human rights (e.g. Garcia-Moreno, 2006), but is according to the Swedish government, the most acute and greatest obstacle to a gender-equal society (Regeringen, 2018). The superior position of men in society contributes to the fact that women's life situation is affected to a greater extent than men in similar situations (Holmberg, Stjernqvist, & Sörensen, 2005)

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