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Polish women's experiences of domestic violence intersecting roles of migration and socio-cultural religious and policy contexts in Poland and in the UK.

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-11, 10:50 authored by Sundari Anitha, Iwona Zielinska, Michael Rasell, Ros KaneRos Kane

Scholarship on domestic violence and abuse has sought to understand how women's experiences are influenced by gender and its intersections with other social relations of power. We draw upon life history interviews with Polish women and interviews with practitioners to contribute to this intersectional and transnational feminist scholarship by examining how intersections between the migration process, immigration status and socio-cultural, religious and institutional contexts of Poland and the UK shape Polish women’s experiences of domestic violence and abuse. In doing so, we seek to redress the invisibilisation of Polish migrant women in the scholarship on domestic violence and abuse in the UK and beyond, in a context where they are invisibilised as ‘white’ and the particularities of their experiences neglected. Beyond a focus on the specificity of Polish women’s experiences through utilising an intersectional lens to understand the difference that difference makes, we also draw attention to similarities in migrant women’s structural location within exclusionary immigration/welfare bordering regimes in the UK, which creates conducive contexts for such violence. In doing so, we widen the lens used to understand domestic violence beyond family and interpersonal dynamics to the opportunities and constraints posed by intersecting social relations and gendered geographies of power. 

Funding

Marie Sklodowska-Curie Action [grant number 842854]

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Science Executive Office (Research Outputs)
  • School of Health and Social Care (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

ISSN

1369-183X

eISSN

1469-9451

Date Submitted

2025-02-02

Date Accepted

2025-02-10

Date of First Publication

2025-02-25

Date of Final Publication

2025-02-25

Relevant SDGs

  • SDG 5 - Gender Equality
  • SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Open Access Status

  • Open Access

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A