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The ‘real’ cost of violencia iha uma laran Timor-Leste Dr. Sara Niner Monash University. SLIDE 1 : TILE. Violence is symptom of women’s economic & social disadvantage.
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The ‘real’ cost of violencia iha uma laran Timor-LesteDr. Sara NinerMonash University SLIDE 1: TILE
Violence is symptom of women’s economic & social disadvantage • VAW: not as a failure of laws, governments or cultures but an ongoing part of the political economy related to structures of inequality, poverty and exploitation… connecting gender violence with economic inequality (True 2012). • The Violence Against Women in Melanesia and East Timor Report (ODE 2008): VAW must be understood as a symptom of women’s economic and social disadvantage.
Costs of VAW • VAW is estimated to be as serious a cause of death and incapacity as cancer among reproductive-age women (ICRW 2005: 2) • Costing violence is growing field= Annual Costs: US $12.6 billion (WHO 2004: x); Australia AU$8 billion (Access Economics 2004); Canada $1 billion+ (Korf 1997); + • indirect socioeconomic costs=lost earnings—death and lost productivity; job loss; lost productivity of abuser due to incarceration; loss of tax revenues—death and incarceration (Orlando 2004: 2). • Additional costs= legal (criminal and civil); health (physical and mental); social services; housing and refuges • Human cost in pain and suffering • Evidence of costs for use in policy-making and advocacy and complement and strengthen moral arguments for prevention (Orlando 2004: viii). • BUT violence not just an issue of economics or development and women’s empowerment not just an input for economic growth: an issue of equality, justice and human rights.
T-L’s post-conflict environment • people accustomed to living with violence during the liberation struggle resulting in a ‘culture of violence’ (UNICEF 2006) • Nearly 40% live on less than US $1.25 a day in purchasing power parity (WB 2012) • 70% live in rural poverty & subsistence farming (NDS 2010). • customary practices still often determine gender roles and relationships which make different levels of accommodation with recently introduced values of democracy, human rights and gender equity • Women limited to private-domestic realm reducing economic, educational and political engagement and making women vulnerable to domestic violence (DV) or ‘violencia iha uma laran’ (Niner 2012) • negative effects of ongoing, rapid and disruptive social, political and economic changes since 1999
DV in T-L • DV most prevalent crime but not dealt with well by justice system • Preventions Campaigns & 2010 Lei Contra Violência Doméstica/Law Against Domestic Violence (LADV) • Timorese perspectives on DV are divergent and understandings of LADV superficial • Conceptualisation of DV in customary justice systems:…as a problem between two extended families rather than the individuals directly involved, prioritizing the protection of the collective relationships in tight-knit communities, or ‘peace’, over ‘justice’… As a result, customary justice systems do not always respect the victim’s interests or rights, frequently blame female victims for violence committed against them, and impose social pressure to accept a solution which provides no redress for the violence (Kovar and Harrington 2013). • Most cases dealt with by local custom: women not usually permitted to participate and compensation for offences usually made to families through male reps. • Recent research Harmonia Iha Familia Project found: combination of ‘traditional values’ and poverty was placing women at risk of DV (Alola Foundation 2011). Poverty was widely reported as exacerbating relationship and household stress.
The gendered economy in T-L • Women have an average of 6 children & contribute more unpaid care and household work than men (NDS 2010) • gendered division of labour characterizes TL economy and gender segmentation characterizes industries and occupations (Costa & Sharp forthcoming) • Women are particularly vulnerable to unemployment and underemployment: lower rates of education, high rates of illiteracy and higher presence in subsistence farming (Costa & Sharp forthcoming) • Of 44 % of married women employed mostly in agriculture for themselves and family 80 % did not receive payment (NSD 2010: 203) • much less active in the labour force: women 48 % compared to men’s 77% (NSD 2008) • women are 25 % of civil service but only 2 % of highest positions (Ospina 2006) • =women earn one-eighth of men (ADB/UNIFEM 2005) • women in informal work face absence of OH&S standards, harassment and other forms of coercion: new Labour Law & Working Women’s Centre (Australian Domestic and Family Violence Clearing House 2012)
Economics of DV in T-L • repercussions of seeking formal justice solutions for DV risks social stigma, breaking up families, loss of home, income and security. • Economic dependency and impact of a gendered labour shrinks women’s options in bad/violent relationship. • economics plays fundamental role in women’s decisions: whether or not they felt able to leave violent partner (TAF 2012: 7): only 1 in 5 women believed their family was able to support them if they needed to leave (NSD 2010: 246). • Only 50 % of women seek help for DV, usually from family and friends (only 4 % from police; 1 % from social services) (NSD 2010: 246). • In absence of social safety net CSO’s attempt to fill the gap but resources limited (TAF 2012: 24). • Women were more likely to seek help if employed particularly rural/self-employed workers (NSD 2010) • Harmonia Iha Familia Project: strong link between work and women’s mental wellbeing; income central to women’s empowerment, safety and psychology (Alola 2014; Rees et al 2014) • Failing to address DV poses significant challenges to achieve TL’s commitments in education & health and constrains economic and social opportunities of families • In post conflict context weak and new institutions are under strain to deliver services; violence against women represents an additional (and invisible) burden needs to be fully counted
Conclusion: costs still need analysis in TL & improving women’s economic situation is crucial Already • SEPI & Grupo de Mulheres Parlamentares de T-L lobby lobby to make gov budgets more gender-responsive & allocate resources for implementation of LADV • Women’s CSOs active in highlighting quality of services available and reporting (Fokupers 2013). Required Action • Government must improve services, law & justice for women survivors—lobbying required • programmes for to facilitate gender equality- Eg. ensure fathers accept financial responsibility in cases of separation • Greater focus on livelihoods for women: LADV states women are entitled to receive skills training to ‘contribute to their successful social reintegration’ but not yet available Research Needed • 2 research projects underway: Asia Foundation’s ‘Economic Dimensions of Domestic Violence TL’ & UNW estimating current costs of services • Analysis of direct & indirect costs and impacts of VAW is required drawing links between income, equity and violence: studies must highlight as health, justice and human rights issue but also poverty, development and economics • Individual success stories of women are worth reviewing