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3 - Reconfiguring the Violence Against Women Act

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2024

Margaret Perez Brower
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
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Summary

In Chapter 3, the overarching question of this book starts to be answered: how do advocacy groups intervene in policymaking processes to represent intersectionally marginalized populations? Here, work is presented that examines how advocacy groups representing intersectionally-marginalized groups have participated in this policymaking process. Analyses of the testimony and statements from advocacy groups during Congressional hearings over the reauthorization of VAWA from the past 25 years is provided to show that select organizations were successfully advocating for linkages between policies and issues that reflected the experiences of intersectionally marginalized groups. These linkages were between VAWA and policies on welfare, immigration, and tribal rights. In this chapter, “intersectional advocacy,” is identified to explain how advocacy groups in this setting engaged in it to change VAWA policy over time. The chapter shows that VAWA changes in remarkable ways that better represent and serve intersectionally marginalized groups.

Type
Chapter
Information
Intersectional Advocacy
Redrawing Policy Boundaries Around Gender, Race, and Class
, pp. 69 - 104
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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