Women in the Squads: Crimes of Violence and Relations of Type
Women in the Squads: Crimes of Violence and Relations of Type
This project aims to analyse the Portuguese institutional setting, the politics and atmosphere of how women are attended in police precincts, from the perspective of gender violence related crimes and gender social relationships guided by asymmetries. As such, the central methodology is based on the production of ethnographies in Portuguese urban precincts, albeit not exclusively. There will be a survey of policy-making and laws, resources, investments, distribution of services, organisation of spaces and the role played by police agents; in particular that played by women in the Police Force when dealing with such crimes. The project raises some questions: does the denunciation of crimes against women call for the dynamics of cultural change in a police organisation that is still predominantly masculine and seems to advocate a masculine ethos? Have there been changes facilitating the framing of police response to and understanding of this type of crime? Is there some relation between the greater presence and action of women in the Police Force and a growing institutional sensitivity concerning "gender crimes"? What degree of symbolic and material investment has there been for the resolution of problems that either concern the basic rights of women or presents them as common citizens in the eyes of the law? It is vital to analyse the concepts in use for this type of crime, the ambiguities of institutional understanding and arrangements viewed in police actions, as well as the production of professional identities, gender, moral and ethics - the images of what the police are and what they should be. Features defining gender, ethnicity, social class, professional status and residence are indelibly present in the responses to this type of crime in a street-level bureaucracy such as the Police Force. It is, therefore, pertinent to find out what ideas of "person" are involved here, for both the police officer and the victim. Theoretically, crimes against women raise still wider problems, such as the debate between the positive vision of citizens' equality in access to justice and the negative vision of the "judicialization" of society, of family relations and the private life, that is, the State being seen as a "technology of power" (and also as a possible agent of "double victimisation"). Accordingly, it is fundamental to involve the police themselves in this argument since they are central actors in the contemporary processes of social and moral order, and in the production of ideas on gender, family, violence, crime, rights/equality.
This study will have three methodological stages: document analysis and problematic framework; an ethnographic approach; and an extensive survey within the Police Force.
Domestic Violence; Police Studies; Gender Relations; Gender Violence
This project aims to analyse the Portuguese institutional setting, the politics and atmosphere of how women are attended in police precincts, from the perspective of gender violence related crimes and gender social relationships guided by asymmetries. As such, the central methodology is based on the production of ethnographies in Portuguese urban precincts, albeit not exclusively. There will be a survey of policy-making and laws, resources, investments, distribution of services, organisation of spaces and the role played by police agents; in particular that played by women in the Police Force when dealing with such crimes. The project raises some questions: does the denunciation of crimes against women call for the dynamics of cultural change in a police organisation that is still predominantly masculine and seems to advocate a masculine ethos? Have there been changes facilitating the framing of police response to and understanding of this type of crime? Is there some relation between the greater presence and action of women in the Police Force and a growing institutional sensitivity concerning "gender crimes"? What degree of symbolic and material investment has there been for the resolution of problems that either concern the basic rights of women or presents them as common citizens in the eyes of the law? It is vital to analyse the concepts in use for this type of crime, the ambiguities of institutional understanding and arrangements viewed in police actions, as well as the production of professional identities, gender, moral and ethics - the images of what the police are and what they should be. Features defining gender, ethnicity, social class, professional status and residence are indelibly present in the responses to this type of crime in a street-level bureaucracy such as the Police Force. It is, therefore, pertinent to find out what ideas of "person" are involved here, for both the police officer and the victim. Theoretically, crimes against women raise still wider problems, such as the debate between the positive vision of citizens' equality in access to justice and the negative vision of the "judicialization" of society, of family relations and the private life, that is, the State being seen as a "technology of power" (and also as a possible agent of "double victimisation"). Accordingly, it is fundamental to involve the police themselves in this argument since they are central actors in the contemporary processes of social and moral order, and in the production of ideas on gender, family, violence, crime, rights/equality.
This study will have three methodological stages: document analysis and problematic framework; an ethnographic approach; and an extensive survey within the Police Force.