Violence And Gender

Sir, - The interim finding of Dr McKeown and colleagues (The Irish Times, June 13th) that women were much more likely than men…

Sir, - The interim finding of Dr McKeown and colleagues (The Irish Times, June 13th) that women were much more likely than men to inflict violence on their spouses, and their comment that this is in line with international studies, are troubling.

Many Irish and international studies - e.g., Kelleher and O'Connor (1999), McWilliams and Spence (1996), Dobash & Dobash (1996), Casey (1987) - established a completely different pattern, with men as the aggressors in the vast majority of cases.

On a similar topic in your columns last year (September 27th), Prof Monica McWilliams, quoting from the British Home Office report Government Policy around Domestic Violence (1996) wrote, and it bears repeating: "The Government recognises that women are more likely to experience domestic violence at some point in their lives, more likely to experience repeat victimisation, more likely to be injured and to seek help, more likely to experience frightening threats, and more likely to be frightened and upset."

In the 1995-1998 period, of the murders of the 27 women which had been solved or awaiting trial, more than half were committed by a current or former partner and all by men (Kelleher & O'Connor ,1999). Is like being compared with like here? If so, we should have seen approximately 25 men murdered by their partners or former partners in the period.

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Kelleher and O'Connor, on the contrary, report that two women were charged with the murder of their male partners and in both cases "a history of domestic violence against the woman was introduced as evidence in court" and "that this is consistent with international literature, which shows that when women murder they are likely to be responding to years of physical and sexual abuse".

That report also documented, as do others, a history of serious physical aggression against women, including many stabbings or threats of stabbing. Research also indicates that a significant number of assaulted pregnant women had a miscarriage as a result. In their 1991 study, McKeown and Gilligan found that the majority of sexual abuse of children was intra-familial, overwhelmingly fathers being the abusers.

In 25 years of involvement in marital breakdown, in a voluntary organisation from 1976 to 1990 and for the past 10 years as a family lawyer, my experience is that to a great extent violence or intimidation and threats of violence is a male weapon against women and children and women who experience it cannot continue in the relationship. Generally, where counselling was a viable option, clients did not experience serious personal threats or worse. Where violence is an issue husbands usually refuse to attend counselling or mediation. Is this the reason that the woman is the partner who instigates legal proceedings for divorce or separation?

Dr McKeown and colleagues acknowledge that the severity, context, reasons or initiation of the violence is not evident from the material. I trust that the final report will clarify this further and the discrepancies raised. It would be regrettable indeed if a report to establish the usefulness of counselling in troubled marriages, where like is not equated with like, could be used as a weapon against women who have already suffered more than enough. - Yours, etc.,

Isobel Butler, Solicitor, Blackrock, Co Dublin.

Sir, - The idea that women may perpetrate as much (or even more) violence in the domestic setting as men (suggested in the Marriage and Relationship Counselling Services Report, The Irish Times, June 14th) is arguably one of the most important "discoveries" affecting contemporary society. Unfortunately, feminism relies so heavily upon the shibboleths of male brutishness and masculine weakness that to admit that men do not exert a monopoly upon violence is perceived (perhaps rightly) as too awful to con template.

Even as your reporter Padraig O'Morain admitted to a female interviewer on RT╔ radio that "we have known since the 1970s that women are violent in the home but didn't want to see it" (sic), her disbelief evoked the Edwardian postcard image of a stout red-faced wife glowering at her diminutive partner. It seems that, after decades of stereotyping, the response to rigorous research - even among earnest male journalists - will be jaundiced for some time.

The truth must out, however. Most victims of serious or lethal assault seen in hospitals throughout these islands are male, so media portrayal of male-on-female violence has always jarred with daily experience. Of course, most serious violence involves intoxicated males in public but, among domestic cases, the head-injured, stabbed or poisoned husband is hardly "trivial". Nor is his subsequent silence mysterious, given the feminist pedigree of family courts.

If society is effectively to address the epidemic of violence, and if we wish to protect all vulnerable people, we must abandon jaded prejudice and acknowledge that the "rise" in female violence (is it simply more public?) is already well documented, in newspapers, scientific journals and even in glossy women's magazines. It has provoked alarm among garda∅ (especially those who patrol Cork city centre at night) and healthcare workers.

If such violence continues to be denied or trivialised, it will "justify" further male and female violence and the cost to an already distressed society will be genuinely terrible to behold. - Yours, etc.,

Dr L. C. Luke, Consultant in Accident and Emergency Medicine, Cork University Hospital Wilton, Cork.