USA: Recession Erodes Resources for Domestic Violence Shelters as Violence Increases
5 November 2009
Since September 2008, 75 percent of domestic violence shelters in the
Meghan Rhoad, a researcher in the Women’s Rights Division of Human Rights Watch, argues that while economic depression does not cause domestic violence, it does lead to “opportunity violence. If the batterer has become unemployed they have more opportunities to be violent. There is more exposure.” (Women’s eNews)
The erosion of the social safety net for domestic violence shelters further aggravates the increase in people seeking protection from family violence. Budget cuts have resulted in decreasing support for domestic violence support networks in states such as
Immigrant and refugee women who experience family violence are often among the hardest hit. “When these domestic violence service programs, such as shelters, get squeezed it is poor women who are the most affected, including a disproportionate number of immigrant women and women of color," said Rhoad. (Women’s eNews)
Emergency shelters targeted towards immigrant women are overflowing, and there are concerns about whether shelter staff members will be able to speak non-English languages and address specific cultural concerns of women seeking support. Isa Woldeguiorguis, the policy and systems advocacy directory at Jane Doe Inc., a Boston-based group that works to reduce domestic violence, argues that “the hurdles that refugee and immigrant women have to go through to reach safety, liberty, dignity are so much greater than they are for non-immigrant women.” (Women’s eNews)
Compiled from: Bijoyeta Das, Women’s eNews, “Recession Shrinks Safety Net for Immigrant Women” (18 October 2009).
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