The Femicide Census
[2023-05-04 01:36:29]
Killing a woman is often defined as killing a woman from being a woman, but some definitions include acts of murdering a woman or a woman.
Biocides are recognized worldwide as a major cause of women's premature death, but research on this problem in Europe is limited.
According to the latest Femicide census report published in December 2017, 113 males were killed by men in the UK, Wales and Northern Ireland in 2016. Nine women who died in the past died for those who knew and 78 women were killed or formerly an intimate partner, of which 65 were shared with their homes and perpetrators It was killed.
To summarize these murderers, these homicides are not isolated events, too many follow a similar pattern of male violence against women. Many people use similar weapons (sharp instruments) in similar environments (of houses of victims or houses that are shared with victims), as well as between perpetrators and victims There is a relation. The original intimate partner was killed))
By looking at the murder cases of these women together we can understand what men need to take to reduce and eventually prevent men from killing women.
Femicide Census is a database of information on women who killed more than 1,000 males in the UK and Wales since 2009. This is an epochal project aimed at better understanding the deadly violence from men to women by enabling detailed tracking and analysis.
With the support of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP and Deloitte LLP, developed by Karen Ingala Smith and Women's Aid.
The census was developed from the urgent need to deal with fatal male violence against women. It can play an important role in helping to determine the pattern of murdering a woman, its circumstances and ultimately to reduce the killing of women.
In February 2015, Femicide Census was announced. This is based on the information collected by Karen Ingala Smith and recorded in her blog Counting Dead Women. Since January 2012 she has searched online male killing news; clear information - police statistics, local news coverage, and reports of women male killings by excessive family murder comments
She gathered details of perpetrators and homicide itself, including dates, names, police, information on children, recorded motives, weapons.
In the annual Femicide Census detailing the details of killing a woman committed by a man, he searched for places where lessons can be learned by observing the incident, and by people who are not strangers or intimate partners It shows that one in six people is being killed. Or a member of a family. In more than a third of cases, criminals use sharp instruments to kill the victims. "By breaking down the barriers against violent crime, we can draw different pictures, which is a wider picture that will influence the causes that lead to violence.Violence is mainly done by men Lessons I learned What I learned from Femicide Census was serious. "
In February 2015, Femicide Census was announced. This is based on the information collected by Karen Ingala Smith and recorded in her blog Counting Dead Women. Since January 2012 she has searched online male killing news; clear information - police statistics, local news coverage, and reports of women male killings by excessive family murder comments
In 2015, based on the information collected by Karen Ingara Smith, a homicide investigation was initiated by a female donor organization and recorded in her blog Counting Dead Women. According to blog reports, between January and September this year at least 106 British women were murdered by men, or men were the main suspects. This is equivalent to deaths of women every six days. According to the annual murder report of the women's aid, nine out of ten women killed in England, Wales, Northern Ireland in 2016 died in the hands of the people they know. Of these 78 women were killed by current or former intimate partners, three of them were killed by their sons and five were killed by anoth