
Every year, campuses and cities across North America hold
"Take Back the Night" -- marches and rallies to protest violence
against women. But surprising data suggests that men may need to
reclaim 'the night' as urgently as women.
On Aug. 10, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released
the results of its first national
Personal Safety Survey (PSS, 2005). It is the only national
survey by a 'Western' country that analyzes a wide range of violence
on the basis of a respondent's sex.
Thus, the PSS offers the best snapshot available of the
comparative violence experienced by men and women in a society with
laws and a culture similar to North America.
The results are remarkable. If valid, they have far-reaching
implications for how issues of gender and violence should be
addressed.
The current approach basically views women as victims and men as
aggressors. The survey's
bottom line: Australian men are twice as likely as women to
become victims of physical violence or of threats thereof (11
percent of men; 5.8 percent of women). For the population between
eighteen and twenty-four years of age, men were almost three times
as likely (31 percent of men; 12 percent of women). But men were
also three times more likely than women to be the perpetrators of
violence.
Violence against men most often took the form of a brute physical
attack rather than a sexual assault/threat. When perpetrated by
another man, the assault occurred "at licensed premises (34 percent)
or in the open (35 percent), however if the perpetrator was female
then 77 percent of the physical assaults occurred in the home."
In some categories of violence, such as domestic violence and
sexual assault, the PSS shows women as more vulnerable than men. For
example, 1.6 percent of women as opposed to 0.6 percent of men
experienced either sexual violence or threats in the year preceding
the survey.
Overall, however, the PSS offers good news to women. One of its
goals was to "expand on the 1996 Women's Safety Survey" and
compare violence against women then to now. With
one notable exception, violence declined; the perception of being in
danger also declined.
The Sydney Morning Herald
reported, "A decade ago, more than 21 percent of women felt
unsafe compared to just over 13 percent in 2005."
Perhaps predictably, the public reaction of Julie Bishop -- a
Liberal member of the Australian House of Representatives who
advises the Prime Minister on women's issues --
focused on the negative news for women: violence against older
women has increased since 1996. To the extent Bishop acknowledged
encouraging data such as the increased reporting of crime, she
credited the Women's Safety Agenda, which is tax-funded at
approximately $57.5 million U.S. Bishop promised to consider the
PSS's findings at an upcoming conference of Women's Ministers' from
Australia and New Zealand.
Bishop may be forced to confront changing attitudes toward gender
and violence. Shortly after the PSS's release, the New Zealand
Herald
reported on a new study. "Where only one partner in a
relationship is violent, it is more likely to be the woman,
University of Otago researchers have found. Researcher Kirsten
Robertson, of the university's psychology department, said the
finding indicated a change of thinking was required on domestic
violence."
Part of that change will come from grappling with the still
widely disparate views offered by studies and surveys on how many
men versus women experience domestic violence. Many of the
differences may be ascribed to nothing more than the methodology
employed by various researchers. Despite those differences, however,
both the estimates of men as victims and women as perpetrators of
domestic violence seem to be rising across the board.
A new approach to gender and violence is likely to hit a brick
wall of sexual politics. Much of gender policy in Australia and
North America -- e.g. affirmative action, domestic violence and
sexual harassment -- is rooted in ideology, in the idea that women
as a class are oppressed by men as a class. But if men are twice as
likely to be threatened or attacked, then the theory of women's
class oppression becomes more difficult to sustain.
Even if men are more likely to be attacked by a fellow-male than
a female, that does not change the fact that they are also victims
of violence.
And the task of collecting quality data becomes more important
because only facts stand a chance of cutting through ideology.
There is some reason to question the quality of data in the PSS.
For example, its summary states "an attempt or threat to inflict
physical harm is included only if a person believes it is likely to
be carried out."
This asks the 'victim' to ascribe intent to an aggressor and
invites subjectivity.
Various figures are identified with "a relative standard error of
25 percent to 50 percent" or "greater than 50 percent"; this makes
them unreliable. Moreover, the math in some tables does not add up;
that is, when the subcategory totals are added together, the sum
total is greater than the parts. (See
page 5.)
Without the raw data or more methodological detail, it is not
possible to tell why this occurs.
There is no reason to believe, however, that the aforementioned
problems skew the data more for one sex than the other.
Other aspects of the survey, however, provide reason to suspect
that violence against men could be understated or glimpsed less
clearly.
Although the PSS surveyed 16,300 adults, it included 11,800 women
and only 4,500 men; this means the data on women should be more
reliable. Moreover, the PSS used only female interviewers; this may
have encouraged women to open up but it could have inhibited men.
In short, the PSS is neither ideal nor definitive but it is
probably the best current picture of gender and violence in Western
society. Under that picture, the caption should read "violence is a
human problem, not a gender one."
Politically correct feminists sought to define violence, within
certain contexts, as a gender problem, because the perception of
women as victims of men promoted their ideology that pitted men
against women. This view of violence as a gender problem has been
sustained because government supported the ideology and its
conclusions with money and favorable law. As a result, a false view
of the nature of violence and of the relationship between the sexes
has been created.
Focusing on women victims is valuable for specific purposes, like
counseling female rape victims, but anyone who campaigns to prevent
violence against women should vigorously applaud similar efforts
directed toward men.
'Take Back The Night' is for everyone.
Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com and a research
fellow for The Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. She is the
author and editor of many books and articles, including the new
book, "Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century"
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her
husband in Canada.
Wendy McElroy © 2006

Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com and a research
fellow for The Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. She is the
author and editor of many books and articles, including the new
book, "Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century"
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her
husband in Canada.