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2007 BYU L. Rev. 387 (2007)
The Personal Is Political - and Economic: Rethinking Domestic Violence

handle is hein.journals/byulr2007 and id is 401 raw text is: The Personal Is Political-and Economic: Rethinking
Domestic Violence
Deborah M. Weissman*
I. INTRODUCTION
All social movements that engage matters of law and intimate
relationships   confront   the   challenge   of   sustaining   theoretical
coherence. Time passes; circumstances change. Theory developed in
the context of one set of objective conditions, at a discrete historical
moment, must possess the capacity to adapt to different conditions
at later historical moments. This is particularly true when theory
serves to inform praxis and when theoretical formulations serve to
inform the strategies that affect the lives of real people.
The domestic violence movement is no exception. Feminist
scholarship originally presented a clear and compelling discourse
about the causes and consequences of domestic violence. The
emphasis    was   on    the   privilege  with   which    patriarchy   was
institutionalized in public realms as a matter of practice and law.
Women activists responded to an emerging understanding about
domestic violence and engaged in a protracted struggle to obtain
public condemnation of what had been previously considered a
private matter. Public attitudes did indeed change, and advocates
were increasingly successful in securing legal remedies to domestic
violence. The goals of domestic violence activists were explicit: to
conceptualize domestic violence as an offense against women, to
oblige law enforcement to treat violence against women as a legal
issue-specifically as a crime-and to charge batterers with crimes
commensurate with the severity of the harm inflicted on their
victims.'
* Professor of Law, University of North Carolina School of Law. The author
gratefully acknowledges Maxine Eichner, Melissa Jacoby, Hiroshi Motomura, and Louis Perez,
Jr. for their support and insightful observations and suggestions. Joyce Kung and Ruby Lichte
Powers provided excellent research assistance.
1. See Deborah Epstein, Effective Intervention in Domestic Violence Cases: Rethinking
the Roles of Prosecutors, Judges, and the Court System, 11 YALE J.L. & FEMINISM 3, 13, 16, 49

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