COVID-19 and Gender-Based Violence in Zimbabwe

COVID-19 and Gender-Based Violence in Zimbabwe

Women's Pandemic Experiences and Lessons for the Future

Munyiswa, Isaiah; Chitando, Ezra; Mateveke, Pauline

Taylor & Francis Ltd

12/2024

198

Dura

9781032799285

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 and Gender-Based Violence in Zimbabwe: Women's Pandemic Experiences and Lessons for the Future 1. The COVID-19 Pandemic and Gender-Based Violence in Zimbabwe 2. The Intersectionality of Culture, Religion, Gender and COVID-19: Implications for Indigenous Women's Health and Wellbeing in Zimbabwe 3. Utilizing the African Duality Theory for Gender Equality during Pandemics 4. Philosophical reflections on intimate partner violence (IPV) during the COVID-19 pandemic in Zimbabwe 5. The feminine quadrant of girlhood, motherhood, wifehood, and widowhood in Titus 2:3-5: A hermeneutical discussion in the context of Christian women, HIV and AIDS, and COVID-19 in Zimbabwe 6. Women's Organizations vs Organizing Women? Questioning Silences and Selective (Re)presentation of Women in a COVID-19 Context in Zimbabwe 7. Women, Religion, Socio-Cultural Beliefs and the HIV/AIDS and COVID-19 Pandemics in Zimbabwe 8. Media framing of Covid-19 gender-based violence in Zimbabwe: The case of the Herald, Daily News and NewsDay (2019 - 2022) 9. 'Stay-at-Home', A double Edged Consequential Policy: The Case of Zimbabwean Women During the COVID-19 Pandemic 10. Structural Violence and /as a Pandemic in Crisis Communication: Has the Media done Justice to Women's Sexual Reproductive Rights? 11. The Media and Dynamics of COVID- 19 Vaccine Acceptance - Hesitance among Harare Central Prison Camp Prison Female Participants 12. Medical Experts on Religious Influencers' Framing of COVID-19 Risk Communication: Implications on Women 13. Pandemics as Disability: Reflections on the Feminisation of Care During Pandemics in Zimbabwe 14. Gender-based Violence Reports in Zimbabwe During the Covid-19 Pandemic and the Danger of Advocacy Inflation CONCLUSION
Pandemic;Shona;Religion;Disability;HIV/AIDS;Domestic violence;Media;Wifehood;Motherhood;Gender equality;Structural Violence;Sexual reproductive rights;Social media;Vaccine;Vacination;Abuse;covid