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October is the
seventh annual Domestic Violence Awareness Month, when activists
and the media focus the nation's attention on violence against
women. However, October's events only tell half the story. Why?
Because the research on domestic violence overwhelmingly
establishes that domestic assault is not a crime committed by
men against women, but instead one committed by both men and
women. By using weapons and the element of surprise, women are
abusing their male partners as often as vice versa.
For example, veteran
domestic violence researchers Richard Gelles, Murray Straus, and
Susan Steinmetz, who were once hailed by the women's movement
for their pioneering work on violence against women, have
repeatedly found that women are just as likely as men to
physically attack their spouses or partners.
Studies conducted by
the Family Research Laboratory at the University of New
Hampshire in 1975, 1985, and 1992, found that abuse rates were
equal between husbands and wives. In fact, the evidence suggests
that abuse of wives by husbands is decreasing, while abuse of
husbands by wives is increasing.
Cal State Long Beach
professor Martin Fiebert has compiled and summarized 117
different studies with over 72,000 respondents that found that
most domestic violence is mutual and, in the cases where there
was only one abusive partner, that partner was as likely to be
female as male.
Studies by
researchers R.I. McNeeley and Coramae Richey Mann show that
women are much more likely than men to use weapons and the
element of surprise. These weapons often include guns, knives,
boiling water, bricks, fireplace pokers and baseball bats.
Neither male nor
female domestic violence can generally be dismissed as self-defense.
According to Straus, for example, roughly 10 percent of women
and 15 percent of men perpetuate partner abuse in self-defense.
Dr. David Fontes, the director of Stop Abuse for Everyone (SAFE),
has also found that only a small percentage of female abusers
are acting in self-defense.
Crime statistics do
indicate that women are more likely to suffer serious injury in
domestic violence than men are. But such statistics are
misleading because surveys show that an abused woman is nine
times as likely to report abuse as an abused man. Many men
hesitate to call the police because they assume, often correctly,
that the police will automatically treat them as if they are the
perpetrator.
Nor do husbands
murder their wives significantly more than wives murder their
husbands. A 1994 Department of Justice study analyzed 10,000
cases and found that women make up over 40 percent of those
charged in familial murders. As crime journalist Patricia
Pearson explains, because women who murder their husbands tend
to use less detectable or traceable methods--such as poisoning (which
are often ruled "heart attacks") and hiring others to do the
killing (which usually aren't counted as "murders by wives" in
official crime statistics), these murders are far less likely to
be noticed than murders by men, which are usually committed with
guns.
Mainstream feminist
organizations, however, have steadfastly maintained that women
are only victims of, but rarely perpetrators of, domestic
violence. As Pearson points out, such organizations are not
doing women any favors. By denying the existence of female
batterers, abusive women are not getting the treatment and
counseling services that they need. Worse, by allowing them to
go unpunished, they are encouraged to believe that they can get
away with their abuse indefinitely. This frequently results in
escalating abuse of men (and children) and, sometimes, abuse of
women when men finally strike back.
Pearson also notes
that because feminists deny woman's capacity for violence, the
serious problem of lesbian battery--which research clearly
indicates is at least as common as heterosexual battery--has
been swept under the rug. Sociology professor Claire Renzetti,
author of Violent Betrayal: Partner Abuse in Lesbian
Relationships, says that lesbian batterers "display a
terrifying ingenuity in their selection of abuse tactics,
frequently tailoring the abuse to the specific vulnerabilities
of their partners."
The list of
prominent feminist and female dissidents who are demanding
acknowledgment of, and accountability from, female batterers is
growing. They include: Canadian Senator Anne Cools, a former
shelter director and a pioneer of the battered women's movement;
author/activist Erin Pizzey, who set up the first battered
women's shelter ever in England in 1971; Cathy Young, author of
Ceasefire: Why Women and Men Must Join Forces to Achieve
Equality; Donna Laframboise of the Canadian National Post;
author and columnist Wendy McElroy, founder of Independent
Feminists and herself a former DV victim; Patricia Overberg and
Carol Ensign, former and current directors of the Valley Oasis
Shelter in Lancaster, California, one of the few domestic
violence shelters in the country which accepts men; Christina
Hoff Sommers, author of Who Stole Feminism?, which
details how feminists obtain inflated domestic violence numbers
by lumping "shouting" and "slamming doors" with real domestic
abuse; former Women's Studies professor Daphne Patai, author of
Professing Feminism; Pearson; Steinmetz; and Renzetti.
Recently both the American Medical Association and the Center
for Disease Control have issued statements acknowledging the
need for attention to male victims of domestic violence.
Familial violence
by and against both men and women is a serious
problem in a violence-wracked America, but it is a problem for
which both men and women share responsibility. Over the past 30
years, feminist activists have justly called abusive men to
account for their despicable actions. It's now time to do the
same for abusive women. |