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Mothers who kill: Cross-cultural patterns on contemporary maternal filicide

Mothers who kill: Cross-cultural patterns on contemporary maternal filicide. Based on research by Michelle Oberman (2003). Maternal filicide. Is not random or unpredictable crime It is actually imbedded in And responsive to the society in which it occurs. One fundamental similarity.

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Mothers who kill: Cross-cultural patterns on contemporary maternal filicide

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  1. Mothers who kill: Cross-cultural patterns on contemporary maternal filicide Based on research by Michelle Oberman (2003)

  2. Maternal filicide • Is not random or unpredictable crime • It is actually imbedded in • And responsive to the society in which it occurs

  3. One fundamental similarity Mother was unable to parent their child under the circumstances dictated by: • Position in society • Place • Time

  4. Best way to protect children • Reevaluate societal norms which govern motherhood and women’s status

  5. Neonaticide • Killing of one’s offspring within the first 24 hours of life • Typically involve young women • Wide range of socio-economic, religious and racial background • The women deny that they are pregnant

  6. Denial triggered by fear they will be cut off by social support network • Boyfriends almost always leave as soon as they realize their condition

  7. Neonaticide • Have a true sense of fear regarding their pregnancy • Tend to be deeply ambivalent • Due to religion, culture, money, ambivalence and immaturity, they are unable or unwilling to pursue either abortion or adoption

  8. Disassociate • From their own bodies during pregnancy • Deny the inevitable • Mistake labor pains for a need to defecate • Overwhelming majority give birth on the toilet

  9. Often give birth in complete silence • This could be caused by psychotic dissociation • Subsequent psychiatric evaluation reveals that prior to pregnancy • Suffered from severe dissociative states • Associated with history of early abuse and chaotic family life

  10. Fatal child neglect • Not intentional killings • Usually occurs when mother is distracted from or inattentive to her child’s needs • Example: babies who die in tub while mom answers phone in another room

  11. Occasionally the mom was socializing while the child is left unattended • Majority of these moms live alone • Isolated • Relatively poor

  12. Historically • Fatal child neglect would have been treated as tragic accidents • Contemporary U.S. this is treated as homicides

  13. Abuse-related maternal filicide • Women who kill during an episode of violent abuse • Sometimes it is a single act of violence • Majority of cases there is a long history of child abuse

  14. Predictable patterns in abuse-related deaths • Specific hours during each day children are most at risk of death by homicide • Coincide with mealtimes and bedtimes • Often stressful, arguments and need to disciple (even in stable loving households)

  15. Assisted or coerced maternal filicide • Women who kill in conjunction with their male partner • Reflects the overlapping problems of domestic violence and child abuse • Most of these moms fail to intervene to protect their child from harm

  16. Purposeful maternal filicide • Mothers manifest some degree of mental illness • Combination of mom’s mental illness and her relative isolation as primary caretaker • Occurs when severely ill women who are expected to care for their children, without any outside support for extended periods

  17. Andrea Yates • History of suicidal behavior and post partum depression • Hospitalized one month prior to drowning her five children • Doctor and family knew she was suicidal

  18. Andrea felt pressured to • Return home to her family • Home schooling four of her children • Caring for newborn • Attending to her frail mother • Mourning the death of her father from Alzheimer's

  19. Rusty Yates worked long hours • He refused to have outside babysitters in his home • Andrea’s only relief was when her mother-in-law visited (which was rare)

  20. Contemporary India • In developed nations sex ratio is 1050 females to 100 males • In India sex ratio is 927 females to 1000 males • Only explanation for a sex ratio that favors males is social intervention

  21. Excessive female child morality is caused by several factors • Female maternal filicide • Prenatal screening and sex-selective abortion • Neglect of the nutritional and health care needs for girl children

  22. Underlying cause of female maternal filicide in India • Low status of women • Decreasing fertility • Son preference • Spread of dowry across all caste groups

  23. Unlike in the U.S. • Women who commit neonaticide do not conceal their pregnancies • They are married and not isolated • Families are aware of their pregnancies • And often insist unwanted daughters are destroyed

  24. Contemporary Fiji • Majority of the population are of Indian descent • Unemployment rate is high • Most live in rural setting • Access to family planning services is limited • Abortion is illegal • Births outside marriage are scorned

  25. Similar to U.S. • Most neonaticidal moms concealed their pregnancy • Little evidence of gender specific maternal filicide • No dowry system

  26. Historically • When a culture has stringent restrictions on women’s sexuality • Including illegal abortions, lack of contraception and single parenting is not accepted • Neonatides will increase

  27. Contemporary Fiji • Domestic violence is common • No neglect-related maternal filicide occurs

  28. Contemporary Hungary • Declining birth rate (-0.5%) • Government has pronatalist policies • Police statistics: one child is murdered by its mother every week • 50% of these cases involve infants

  29. Starting in 1994 • Government introduced new measures • Halted funding of contraceptive pills • Monthly income is $100 (U.S.) and the pill costs $3.50

  30. 80% of adolescents are sexually active • Large percentage do not usual any form of contraception • Abortion is restricted. Woman must prove a “crisis situation” before it is allowed

  31. Vulnerabilities of Hungarian women • Hard to secure employment and housing • Sexual harassment in the workplace is virtually epidemic • There are no laws against sexual harassment • Domestic violence is commonplace • Few shelters, no restraining orders exist

  32. Rape is viewed as a “private” crime • Age of consent is 14 • Rape victims’ behavior is seen as material element in the case

  33. Hungary is learning the hard way • Restricting abortion does not necessarily result in higher birth rates • Good sex education and subsidized contraceptives are needed • You cannot force women to have babies against their wishes

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