Violence against women is considered a systemic social practice. Aware of the presence of systemic violence “at the horizon of social imagination,” members of some groups, women in this case, learn that they might suffer it any time “simply because they are members of that group” (Young Reference Young1990, 62). This understanding encompasses physical attacks as well as humiliation, harassment, intimidation, and stigmatization. Systemic violence targets women because they are women, although they are differently affected and have gendered experiences that are also shaped by race, class, sexuality, generation, and nationality (Collins Reference Collins2015).
Violence against women in politics is grounded in sexist values, practices, and institutions. Constituting a reaction to women in politics, it targets women participating in electoral contests and formal representative bodies as well as women activists. Its dynamics aim at women's bodies as much as their voices and public identities—in other words, their physical, moral, and material conditions for being politicians and engaging in public action.
Violence against women in politics can be conceptualized as a “strategy to keep positions of power” (Albaine Reference Albaine2015, 151) as much as an expression of “male privilege and power in society” (Restrepo Sanín Reference Restrepo Sanín2016, 5). A phenomenon affecting women in politics worldwide (Krook Reference Krook2017), it seeks to limit women's political participation and their role as legitimate interlocutors. Its implications for democratic representation and gender justice are thus undeniable.
ADVANCES IN LATIN AMERICA
In Latin America, violence against women in politics has been the subject of political debate and new legislation in recent years. In 2012, Bolivia was the first country to specifically address political violence against women in its laws.Footnote 1 Mexico typified “political violence” against women in 2013, including it in a broader law preventing violence against women as well as in the country's electoral code.Footnote 2 In other countries, recent initiatives have sought to enlarge the definition of gender violence, expanding it to include violence in politics, as in Peru,Footnote 3 or connecting acts of violence against specific women to the denial of voice and rights to women in general, as in Argentina.Footnote 4
These new laws and bills make a clear statement that violence encompasses stereotypes and structures reproducing gender domination. They recognize multiple dimensions of violence against women in politics (although politics is not the main issue for some of them), including physical, sexual, and psychological violence, as well as symbolic and economic violence (Krook and Restrepo Sanín Reference Krook and Sanín2016). Such an understanding is important, given that these different dimensions “frequently overlap and escalate” as part of an intertwined phenomenon (Restrepo Sanín Reference Restrepo Sanín2016, 27).
THE CASE OF BRAZIL
In Brazil, recent laws against domestic violence (Law 11.340/2016) and assassination of women (Law 13.104/2015) assume a gender perspective, setting new legal parameters for prevention and criminalization. They are the result of decades of activism by feminist movements as well as transnational agreements and policies in favor of women's rights (Bandeira and Almeida Reference Bandeira and Almeida2015). Acts of political violence against women in politics have been reported by women in Congress and discussed by feminist movements, but these dynamics have not been the focus of academic research or typified yet in legal instruments. Women who have reported harassment and other aggressions, or started a lawsuit against male politicians who have menaced and humiliated them in Congress, therefore risk high exposure in a disadvantageous political environment.Footnote 5
Brazil has one of the worst rates for women's formal representation in the Americas. While the regional average stands at 28.5% for women in single and lower houses of parliament (Inter-Parliamentary Union 2018), women constitute less than 10% of Brazilian deputies. The picture is not much better in other levels or branches of government. At the same time, however, changes in women's relative position, the agenda of organized movements acting within the state, and a growing presence of feminism in Brazilian society have placed gender-based agendas in the center of political dispute (Biroli Reference Biroli, Felipe Miguel and Biroli2016b). A woman was also elected president for the first time in 2010 and reelected in 2014.
In this mixed context, multiple negative reactions to women's participation in politics have occurred, precipitated by growing participation of women within the state structure, which started in the 1980s but accelerated after the arrival of the Workers’ Party in the federal government in 2003 (Abers and Tatagiba Reference Abers, Tatagiba, Rossi and Von Bülow2015; Biroli Reference Biroli2018; Machado Reference Machado2016; Matos and Paradis Reference Matos and Paradis2014). These patterns suggest that violence against women in politics as a concept should be expanded further, encompassing not only hostility to politically active women but also efforts to roll back feminist policy initiatives. These dynamics are deeply interrelated, sharing the same goal of undermining gender equality advances in the public sphere.
Since 2015, organized attacks against a “gender perspective” and a so-called gender ideology in laws, public policies, and education have occurred in the Brazilian Congress, as well as in local politics. Critics of gender equality frame feminists as enemies and seek to reaffirm the traditional family and women's conventional roles.Footnote 6 Men in Congress, for example, have spoken about feminist advances in public policy as threats “against the family” while also confronting their female colleagues who speak out and work in favor of women's rights. They accuse them of being deviant and out of touch with “real women,” who, according to Federal Deputy Flavinho, are “battling to survive, do not want to be empowered, they want to be loved, they want to be cared for, they want to be respected. Feminists are the ones who want to be empowered” (Department of Tachygraphy, April 27, 2016, 83).
Laws suppressing a “gender perspective” from documents and public policy promote a view of gender inequality in society and politics as the natural state of affairs. They are thus intimately connected to a backlash against women in the political sphere. Evidence of this link can be seen in the fact that legislative proposals against “gender ideology” were presented in Congress at the same time that the campaign to impeach and depose President Dilma Rousseff was occurring in 2016. The impeachment process was infused with explicit misogynistic content, with Rousseff repeatedly characterized as politically incompetent, incapable of negotiating, and neurotic (Biroli Reference Biroli2016a). Once she was removed from office, the new government announced a cabinet composed only of white men and cut off dialogue with women's movements. This suggests a reversal, a revival of the “most extreme stereotypes, the ones which deny legitimacy to women's presence in the public space,” which earlier studies had considered overcome (Miguel and Biroli Reference Miguel and Biroli2011, 168).
CONCLUSIONS
Experiences in Brazil suggest a need to broaden existing definitions of violence against women in politics, expanding the focus from an emphasis on reactions to increases in the number of women in politics (Cerva Cerna Reference Cerva Cerna2014) to include efforts to undermine the strengthening of feminism in society and the growth of feminist activism within the state. Political actions to suppress gender equality agendas in public policy are intimately connected to violence against women in politics—and more generally in society. The goal of these efforts is to erase the historical achievements of feminist movements, collectives, and networks to promote laws and policies for gender equality. Both sets of action aim to reduce the potential of women's voices to build paths to gender equality by silencing them and deconstructing feminist policy agendas.