
Gender Violence between Couples & Mediation
Author(s) -
Yaíma Águila Gutiérrez
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
annals of bioethics and clinical applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2691-5774
DOI - 10.23880/abca-16000173
Subject(s) - mediation , gender violence , sociocultural evolution , psychology , phenomenon , deconstruction (building) , gender role , social psychology , domestic violence , developmental psychology , gender studies , human factors and ergonomics , poison control , political science , sociology , medicine , engineering , medical emergency , social science , physics , quantum mechanics , waste management , law
Gender violence is a sociocultural and historical phenomenon that affects millions of people in the world and the victims can be women or men, although women prevail. Gender-based violence between couples is one of the types most studied due to the impact they have on the family and on the development of children. The cycle of gender violence suggests that mediation is not an effective tool in the secondary prevention of gender violence between couples through the resolution of their conflicts. The nature of gender-based violence demonstrates that behaviors and behaviors are learned, as well as gender roles and stereotypes. In the process of deconstruction of these learnings and in the construction of others, the mediation process is of vital utility.