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This study focuses on the experience of refugee women in Cape Town. The main focus is on gender-based violence and the linkages between conflicts at home, fleeing from it, as well as the problems faced by women when they reach the new' country where they are suppose to be safe, but yet continue to violence. By referring to my own empirical research I try to tease out the many instances of violence and abuse such women face, how they understand and try to make sense of it and how they try to take up their lives in Cape Town. I utilized the much used ecological framework to analyze gender-based…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This study focuses on the experience of refugee women in Cape Town. The main focus is on gender-based violence and the linkages between conflicts at home, fleeing from it, as well as the problems faced by women when they reach the new' country where they are suppose to be safe, but yet continue to violence. By referring to my own empirical research I try to tease out the many instances of violence and abuse such women face, how they understand and try to make sense of it and how they try to take up their lives in Cape Town. I utilized the much used ecological framework to analyze gender-based violence and argue that, while this model' is dynamic and allows one to make analytical linkages across different levels' of violence, it nevertheless does not adequately provide for understanding the relationship between larger global and international processes, the connection that women may still have with their countries of origin and the impact of being a refugee or unwanted immigrant'.A descriptive analysis indicated that three quarter of the women have in one way or the other been abused by their partners.It indicated, factors beyond their control has exacerbated it's occurrence.
Autorenporträt
Ngwetoh Wanka was born in 1978 in Buea-Cameroon. She is a graduate from the University of Buea with a BSc in Sociology and Anthropology. She moved down to South Africa in 2004 where she has since completed Maters degree in Anthropology. She also has a national Diploma in Museum and Heritage Studies and now works for the UWC-Robben Island Museum.