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Geographies of Trauma: The Implications for Understandings of Rural Domestic Abuse - CANCELLED

Wed, Nov 13, 5:00 to 6:20pm, Salon 10 - Lower B2 Level

Abstract

It is axiomatic that domestic abuse causes both physical and psychological injury, or trauma. This paper brings feminist perspectives on trauma, and lessons from the recent ‘spatial turn’ in trauma, together with (predominantly) American and Australian scholarship on men’s violence to women in rural areas. The arguments presented in these bodies of scholarship are used to frame the narratives of front-line police response officers and domestic abuse service providers about domestic abuse and service provision in a rural English county. Their stories were collected during a study of the Geospatial and Contextual Patters of Rural Domestic Abuse, in collaboration with Cumbria Constabulary, funded by the UK Home Office. Bringing inter-disciplinary scholarship to bear on original research findings, the paper demonstrates that consideration of ‘space’, ‘place’ and feminist perspectives on trauma have much to offer to international scholarship on rural domestic abuse.

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