Version 4 2024-03-12, 19:58Version 4 2024-03-12, 19:58
Version 3 2023-10-29, 17:13Version 3 2023-10-29, 17:13
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 19:58authored bySundari Anitha, Aisha. K. Gill
<p>This article analyses 26 interviews with frontline female practitioners from domestic violence and abuse (DVA) services for racially minoritised women in England and Wales, exploring how these practitioners—who are from the same racially minoritised communities as the women they support—responded to the challenges of the COVID-19 crisis. These specific practitioner perspectives offer valuable insights into the specific ways in which the pandemic exacerbated the intersectional vulnerabilities of minoritised women experiencing DVA. Interpreted through a standpoint feminist lens, the findings reveal how frontline practitioners used bureaucratic discretion both to meet minoritised women’s changed needs during the pandemic in order to enhance their safety and to challenge the exclusions and intersectional inequalities underpinning pandemic policies. The study illuminates the institutional dimensions of frontline practitioner responses to the pandemic and contribute to debates within the street-level bureaucracy scholarship about the nature of bureaucratic discretion exercised by frontline practitioners.</p>
History
School affiliated with
School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)