Abstract

In 2020, men in Turkey murdered 300 women, and 171 women were found suspiciously dead. The dominant narrative around suspicious death cases involves a faulty assumption that women are prone to committing suicide. Women’s organisations and cause lawyers unite against all kinds of violence to challenge this dominant narrative, which grants impunity to perpetrators. Drawing on resource mobilisation theory, this article investigates how women’s organisations become involved in femicide and suspicious death cases to articulate counter-narratives and advance women’s access to justice. It focuses on Şule Çet’s case, which raised intense public reactions due to the lack of procedural fairness at the investigation stage. It relies on semi-structured interviews with Şule’s lawyer and the members of the We Will Stop Femicide Platform (Kadın Cinayetlerini Durduracağız Platformu) and the Gelincik Centre (Gelincik Merkezi) to illustrate how women’s organisations made Şule’s story visible and countered the dominant narrative surrounding suspicious death cases. The findings illustrate that women’s organisations’ ongoing struggle to encourage courts to hear women’s stories demands co-operation between different social and legal mechanisms. It includes a combination of several strategies, such as following femicide cases and forming public opinion through social media. The article concludes by arguing that women’s organisations’ use of counter-narratives transforms femicide cases from being only a statistic to a public cause, contributing to women’s struggle in accessing justice.

Highlights

  • In 2004, Güldünya Tören gave birth after rape

  • The findings illustrate that women’s organisations’ ongoing struggle to encourage courts to hear women’s stories demands co-operation between different social and legal mechanisms. It includes a combination of several strategies, such as following femicide cases and forming public opinion through social media

  • The activities of the Platform are explained as follows: “Joins court cases via its representatives and lawyers next to the women who are exposed to different forms of violence [...] Embraces its deceased sisters; fights for justice hand in hand with their families; pursues femicide cases; provides legal assistance; creates public opinion by drawing attention to femicide in the court houses [ . . . ] It fights for the solution of the legal problems regarding the violence against women, puts up a struggle to attain legal gains in favor of women and actively participates in the legislation processes

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Summary

Introduction

In 2004, Güldünya Tören gave birth after rape. Shortly afterwards, her brothers shot her in the middle of the street. Kaya attended a TV talent music show, about which she received several death threats One day, her boyfriend fired a bullet from outside into her house and shot her in the head. Women’s organisations and cause lawyers unite against all kinds of violence to challenge this dominant narrative, which grants impunity to perpetrators Studying their effort in offering (counter)narratives is important. Role in countering the dominant narrative surrounding femicide cases, with a particular focus on Şule Çet’s case, which raised intense public reactions due to the lack of procedural fairness at the investigation stage It asks the following questions: How do women’s organisations follow femicide cases in Turkey? The aim is to illustrate why women follow femicide and suspicious death cases It investigates how and why women’s organisations follow femicide cases, focusing on their involvement in Şule’s case

Theoretical Concerns
Methodological Concerns
A Historical Analysis
The Story of Şule Çet
The Distorted Version of Şule’s Story
They Aim to Encourage the Court to Hear Counter-Narratives
They Stimulate Public Engagement and Construct Counter-Narratives through
They Co-Operate and Show Solidarity
The Court’s Decision
Findings
Conclusions

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