| Literature DB >> 26859885 |
Carmen Vives-Cases1,2,3, Isabel Goicolea3,4, Alison Hernández4, Belen Sanz-Barbero2,5, Aisha K Gill6, Anna Costanza Baldry7, Monika Schröttle8, Heidi Stöckl, Heidi Stoeckl9.
Abstract
Femicide, defined as the killings of females by males because they are females, is becoming recognized worldwide as an important ongoing manifestation of gender inequality. Despite its high prevalence or widespread prevalence, only a few countries have specific registries about this issue. This study aims to assemble expert opinion regarding the strategies which might feasibly be employed to promote, develop and implement an integrated and differentiated femicide data collection system in Europe at both the national and international levels. Concept mapping methodology was followed, involving 28 experts from 16 countries in generating strategies, sorting and rating them with respect to relevance and feasibility. The experts involved were all members of the EU-Cost-Action on femicide, which is a scientific network of experts on femicide and violence against women across Europe. As a result, a conceptual map emerged, consisting of 69 strategies organized in 10 clusters, which fit into two domains: "Political action" and "Technical steps". There was consensus among participants regarding the high relevance of strategies to institutionalize national databases and raise public awareness through different stakeholders, while strategies to promote media involvement were identified as the most feasible. Differences in perceived priorities according to the level of human development index of the experts' countries were also observed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26859885 PMCID: PMC4747603 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0148364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participants in the brainstorming, sorting and rating by country of their institutions.
| Brainstorming | Sorting and rating | |
|---|---|---|
| Spain | 4 | 4 |
| Israel | 2 | 2 |
| Italy | 1 | 3 |
| Belgium | 0 | 1 |
| Germany | 1 | 2 |
| Croatia | 0 | 1 |
| Lithuania | 2 | 1 |
| Macedonia | 2 | 1 |
| Malta | 1 | 2 |
| Poland | 1 | 1 |
| Portugal | 1 | 1 |
| Romania | 1 | 6 |
| Slovenia | 2 | 1 |
| UK | 1 | 2 |
| Austria | 2 | 0 |
| Greece | 1 | 0 |
| Netherlands | 1 | 0 |
| Cyprus | 2 | 0 |
| Total | 25 | 28 |
Countries represented among participants in the different phases of the concept mapping study.
Fig 1Clusters of actions to promote improvement of data collection systems on femicide across Europe.
Cluster map based on experts’ thematic grouping of action strategies.
Overview of the content of the clusters, selected strategies and average ratings of clusters items.
| CLUSTERDESCRIPTION | SELECTED STRATEGIES | RELEVANCE | FEASIBILITY |
|---|---|---|---|
| PHASE 1. POLITICAL AWARENESS | |||
| Putting femicide on the public agenda—Strategies to enhance political will in order to make femicide a public priority. | - Ensuring political will and commitment (1). Putting the concept of femicide into the academic, social, political and legal agenda (4). | 5.05 | 4.29 |
| Media coverage- Strategies to improve the quantity and quality of media coverage of the problem of femicide. | - Publicizing the information on femicide through accessible communication venues (9). Training journalists on how to report these cases properly (10). | 4.70 | 4.44 |
| Awareness raising on data collection—Strategies to raise awareness of the importance of collecting accurate data on femicide among data collectors and stakeholders. | - Alerting the public institutions, ministries and other state authorities to the need to identify, register and analyze the characteristics of femicide as a specific crime (14). Increasing awareness among data collection personnel (15). | 4.88 | 4.40 |
| Definition—Strategies to reach consensus on a definition of femicide that captures the complexity of the phenomenon. | Establishing a clear definition of femicide across countries (22). | 4.69 | 4.04 |
| PHASE 2. TECHNICAL STEPS | |||
| Quality of data collectors—Strategies to improve the quality of the data collection systems on femicide, with special focus on adequate sensitization and training of professionals involved in the collection and reporting of data. | Training those in charge of collecting those data on the importance of gathering correct information on all relevant aspects (28). | 5.10 | 3.74 |
| Institutionalization of national data base—Strategies to ensure that countries have a publicly funded, centralized and sustainable data collection system on femicide. | - Establishing a database, publicly funded and sustained, to collect information on all forms of violence against women including femicide (32). Developing a centralized system that gathers data from all relevant institutions (34). | 5.28 | 4.12 |
| Data collection structure—Strategies to ensure the quality of data collection systems of femicide, with focus on structural and organizational aspects. | - Standardizing data collection systems across police and court data collection system (42). Deciding on what information to collect based on the state of the art of the issue (50). | 4.66 | 3.90 |
| Variables to be collected—Suggestions for specific, standardized information to be gathered for every case of a female homicide. | - Collecting basic socioeconomic data on victims and offenders, including their age, education level, employment status and/or occupational class, place of birth, and area of residence (11). Ensuring that all types of data collection systems (crime, court, etc.) collect at least the following information: sex of both victim and perpetrator, type of relationship between them, prior history of domestic violence, previous institutional interventions (51). | 5.20 | 4.21 |
| Triangulation—Strategies to enhance triangulation across data collection systems, both at the national level, to enhance case detection, and at the regional level, to enhance comparability. | - Identifying a minimum set of variables covered that allow us to know the situation in Europe and make comparisons between countries (55). Triangulating monitoring systems data with newspaper articles, police and court statistics (59). | 4.69 | 4.08 |
| Qualitative follow up—Strategies to collect in depth information on every suspicious case in order to diminish underreporting and better understand the phenomenon. | - Developing qualitative research on motives, context and background of the cases in order to find out, if and how these crimes could be prevented (65). | 4.56 | 4.11 |
Description of the clusters depicted in Fig 1. Examples of strategies and the average rating of strategies within the cluster. Corresponding numbers of example strategies are indicated in parenthesis.
Summary of the most and the least relevant and feasible strategies to build femicide data collection systems according to participants’ opinions.
| The 5 most relevant and feasible strategies | The 5 least relevant and feasible strategies |
|---|---|
| 51. Ensuring that all type of data collection systems (crime, court, etc.) gather at least the following information: sex of victim and perpetrator, type of relationship between them, prior history of domestic violence and previous institutional interventions. | 49. Ensuring that cases where the court does not have enough evidence to convict the offender for a crime likely to be femicide are included in the monitoring systems as suspicious cases of femicide. |
| 55. Identifying a minimum set of variables covered at least in the European context that allow us to know the situation in Europe and make comparisons between countries. | 64. Reviewing past cases of women murdered to identify if they are femicides or not. |
| 32. Establishing a database, publicly funded and sustained, to collect information on all forms of violence against women including femicide. | 69. Interviewing perpetrators, relatives, friends, neighbors and acquaintances. |
| 33. Ensuring that national data on femicide are collected following international recommendations and comparable with data collected in other countries. | 63. Tracking cases in which the perpetrator commits suicide after committing the intimate partner femicide. |
| 28. Training those in charge of collecting those data on the importance of gathering correct information on all relevant aspects. | 48. Upgrading national records about the deaths and causes of death with the information about murder as a cause of death (Ministry of Health) and using this source as a possible detector of those murders that are committed before the perpetrator commits a suicide. |
Results of strategies rating based on experts’ assessment of relevance and feasibility.
Fig 2Comparison of average cluster relevance ratings by countries with higher and lower HDI.
The clusters with significant difference in the domain of “Political awareness” are highlighted in bold.