KAVITA IS RIGHT - [email protected]

On 26 Nov, 11:10, Kavita Krishnan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Research on domestic violence cannot be conducted through online
> 'questionaires', that too those worded in a way that displays ignorance of
> social science and lack of any familiarity with the women's movement, rather
> couched in the language of patriarchal tradition. Green Youth should not
> give credence to such patriarchal 'common sense'
> masquerading as 'research.'
> Kavita Krishnan, AIPWA
>
> 2009/11/25 rajni <[email protected]>
>
>
>
> > Domestic Violence Act – A Research
>
> > In a live society there are always conflicting interests. More live a
> > society is more conflicting the relations amongst its members would
> > be. The logic is simple. The society is going to attain a new
> > destination and the positions of the members inter alia (amongst them)
> > would also be redefined and future gains of the members would depend
> > on their new positions. According to this logic each constituent of a
> > society is always in a conflicting mode with others. This conflict is
> > merely a conflict of interests and it does not mean an enmity.
>
> > Independent Indian society has witnessed a lot of similar conflicts of
> > interests. One such area of conflicts has been the home of this
> > society. The basic structure of the ‘Home’ has also seen a shift in
> > its appearance. An Indian home was basically conceived on The
> > Principle of Division of Labor.
>
> > Traditionally the husband was given a duty to provide the resources
> > from outside and the wife was supposed to ‘Build a Home’ with those
> > resources. It was a home in which the next generation was nurtured
> > ‘Homely’ by the wife in the capacity of a mother. Husband, now father
> > was to show torch to that ‘Next Generation’ after it had attained a
> > particular level of maturity, which sometimes varied or on other times
> > lost its very peculiarities.
>
> > With the spread of western education a new value system was inculcated
> > in the Indian society. Women started coming out of the ‘Home’ and
> > earning in equality with men. The age-old ‘Labor – Division’ of Indian
> > Home was thwarted. It is not the objective here to count the merits or
> > demerits of such a new value system but what it did, certainly it
> > blurred the traditional roles of men and women in the society and also
> > in the ‘Home’.
>
> > Now both men and women started working in the same sphere and with an
> > axiom of political equality their relations were soon started being
> > regulated under the shadow of State Authority i.e. the Law. Laws were
> > legislated and implemented. Men alleged that these laws placed them at
> > an adverse position while women claimed that they were socio-
> > historically placed adversely in the traditional ‘Marriage System’ and
> > the laws just tried to emancipate them from that adversity.
> > For a complete study click:
> > Domestic Violence Act – A Research
> >http://www.psmalik.com/a-research-on-dva.html
> > My website:http://www.psmalik.com/
> > My Blogs:http://www.psmalik.com/article-hub.html
> > Blogs on Wordpress:http://www.psmalik.com/wpblogs
> > This Article:http://www.psmalik.com/a-research-on-dva.html
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