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Maxine Marz is an
expert safety/security consultant, strategist, writer and seminar
presenter. She holds an undergraduate and graduate degree in
Criminology from the University of Toronto and numerous accredited
certificates in crime studies and deviant psychopathology. She has
over seven years of practical experience in crime trend research and
analysis, Victimology, CPTED (Crime Prevention Through Environmental
Design), harm reduction and crime prevention. In May 2000, Maxine
founded Fine Line Research & Consulting - a company specializing in
safety and security consultation services for persons interested in
increasing their personal safety and security. Maxine Marz can be
contacted at: maxibyproxy@sprint.ca.
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Four Part Series on Husband Abuse... |
Part 3: Husband
Abuse Erodes Dignity
by
Maxine Marz 
The recent article on husband abuse
highlighted the emotional and psychological torment many abused men
endure from their intimate partners.
Many abused men hold out faint hope that their situation will
eventually change for the better without involving outside help for
their partner or themselves. Some who are even physically abused opt
to not involve the authorities because they fear that they will not
be believed and that the system will take the side of their abusive
spouse – who will portray herself as the victim and them as the
abusive villain in the relationship.
Unfortunately, remaining silent and not seeking outside intervention
rarely stops the abuse – as most men in similar situations have
revealed. Instead, the emotional and mental abuse often escalates in
severity and frequency and eventually leads to some degree of
physical assault on the man.
This progression in violence is typical of all abusers irrespective
of gender, because their ultimate goal is to assert their power and
maintain control over their partner. In fact, the level of abuse
often intensifies when an abusive spouse does not fear any threat of
repercussion and/or when their abuse fails to elicit the desired
shock-value response from their victim.
While it is true that most physical assaults caused by women tend to
be less severe when compared to a man’s physical assault on a woman
with his fist or a weapon, the abusive woman’s slaps, bites, kicks
and/or pulling of her partner’s hair are nevertheless still very
hurtful because, in addition to subjecting physical pain, they
attack the man’s dignity and erode his sense of self-worth. Many men
also encounter emotional abuse when their abusive spouse turns to
using their children to assert her control over them and their
relationship.
To add insult to injury, some abusive women not only victimize their
spouses by abusing them verbally, emotionally, financially and/or
physically, but they also attempt to manipulate the criminal justice
system in their favour and against their partner. This
unconscionable attempt of some abusive women not only re-victimizes
their already abused husbands by denying them equal rights and fair
protection under the law, but it simultaneously devalues and
undermines the admirable progress women’s groups have achieved over
the years in trying to protect the rights of legitimately abused
wives and their children in the criminal courts.
It is evident that our society has made positive strides over the
years to bring needed attention to domestic abuse and to better
protect women from their abusive husbands or partners.
Unfortunately, based on what many abused husbands currently
experience, we still have a long way to go to afford them with
similar protection of their safety and security and to eliminate the
current gender bias in our system that re-victimizes them all over
again when they step into the legal arena.
To help protect the rights and safety of abused husbands, greater
social awareness and understanding is needed. Social and legal
reforms are also warranted to ensure that abusive women are held to
the same standard of law as abusive men when they attack their
intimate partner. In addition, the shroud of shame and secrecy
placed on husband abuse needs to be lifted and their plight be
recognized as serious and legitimate.
Finally, men who are abused by their intimate partners are urged to
speak out freely and openly – and as a just and egalitarian society
we need to listen to them non-judgmentally and react accordingly.
Only when the current duplicitous gender bias is eliminated will
abused husbands be afforded with the same protection currently
afforded to legitimately abused women.
Copyright 2004 Maxine Marz

Men’s Safety Seminar: If you were, or
are, an abused husband interested in attending seminars on this
topic please e-mail me at
mmsafetyseminars@sprint.ca.

Originally Published August 17, 2004 in
METRO Newspaper

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