Full Description
This book synthesises narrative research on men convicted of intimate femicide/feminicide in Latin America. Based on repeated biographical interviews conducted across eight countries, it offers a sociological exploration of the perpetrators' lives and their processes of sense-making through the analysis of their narratives. The book identifies cross-cutting themes and narrative arcs in these men's accounts and examines how these relate to, interweave with one another, and help explain the perpetration of intimate partner violence. By deepening our understanding of harm-doing, it contributes to ongoing debates in criminology, law, public health, the social and human sciences of violence, and gender studies.
Contents
Part I: Setting the stage.- Chapter 1. Why?.- Chapter 2. What?.- Chapter 3. How?.- Part II: Listening to their stories.- Chapter 5. Zooming out.- Chapter 6. Weather vanes.- Part III: Deciphering the recipes.- Chapter 7. A narrative landscape.- Chapter 8. Comparing apples and pears. The issue of the historical moment.- Chapter 9. What if...? A counterfactual experiment.- Chapter 10. Conclusions.