6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1272bf6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

At the Interface of National and Transnational: The Development of Finnish Policies against Domestic Violence in Terms of Gender Equality

Tuija Virkki

subject

feminismsosiaalipolitiikkaperheväkivaltamedia_common.quotation_subjectviolence against womenhyvinvointipolitiikkaContext (language use)welfare policydomestic violence; violence against women; policy responses; gender equality; feminist movement; transnational perspective; interaction between national and transnational; social policy; welfare states; Finlandsocial policylcsh:Social SciencesfeminismiFeminist movementpolicy responsestransnational perspectivehyvinvointivaltiofeminist movementRole modelSuomi050602 political science & public administrationtransnationaalisuusSociologygender equalityFinlandmedia_commonSocial policytransnationalismdomestic violence05 social sciencesGeneral Social SciencesGender studiesWelfare stateta5142interaction between national and transnational0506 political sciencelcsh:Htasa-arvoequality (values)Transformative learning050903 gender studiesDomestic violencewelfare states0509 other social sciencesWelfare

description

Although gender inequalities are the main social mechanisms behind the (re)production of domestic violence, policy responses to domestic violence as a gender-related problem vary at both the national and transnational levels. This article examines the interaction between national and transnational policies against domestic violence, focusing on how domestic violence is constructed as a gender-related problem in Finland, a Nordic welfare state that is often cited as a role model in gender equality. Using the conception of policies as historically changing and culturally specific discourses, this article offers an overview of the ways in which the perspective on domestic violence of the transnational feminist movement has been engaged and transformed in the Finnish context over the five last decades. It is shown that transnational pressure has played a critical role in pushing Finland towards a stronger recognition of domestic violence as a gender issue. However, this transformation has taken place rather within the framework of more neutral “women-friendly” welfare policies than within a feminist framework. The article concludes that the Finnish way of translating transnational norms to the national level is characterized by a tendency to modify the transformative meanings underpinning the transnational feminist discourses to a more gender-neutral form. peerReviewed

10.3390/socsci6010031http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/1/31