Events
Gender violence in intimate partner contexts in India: implications for education
Tuesday 21 April 15:00 until 16:30
University of Sussex Campus : C333, Arts C / Zoom Webinar
Speaker: Professor Sundari Anitha, University of Sheffield
Part of the series: CIE Research Café
Navigating interpersonal, familial, institutional and structural violence: Young women’s accounts of abusive non-marital relationships in educational contexts in India
When: 21 April, 3-4:30PM
Where: C333, Arts C / Zoom
Abstract:
Research on sexual and gender-based violence in India predominantly focuses upon sexual violence and harassment perpetrated by strangers or child sexual abuse, while in relation to domestic violence and abuse (DVA), the overwhelming focus remains on marital relationships. The recent surge of research, feminist activism and policy attention to sexual and gender-based violence in India has scarcely addressed DVA within non-marital intimate relationships, in a context where such relationships are becoming more commonplace yet attract gendered risks and penalties for women/girls.
Drawing upon life/relationship history interviews with 36 victim-survivors aged 18-35 and 24 stakeholders (student activists, members of HEI complaints committees and staff at domestic violence services), this presentation will apply a gender lens to this gap by exploring the nature of victim-survivors' experiences of domestic violence, institutional mechanisms and victim-survivors’ constrained agency in response to violence and abuse. I present emerging findings on the nature and patterns of domestic abuse and analyse women’s strategies to end abusive relationships in the face of men’s coercive and controlling behaviour intended to prevent women from leaving what are commonly clandestine relationships. Intersecting social relations of power based on gender, age, caste and religion have implications for women's exercise of agency as they seek to navigate and survive the interconnected interpersonal, familial, institutional and structural violence that shapes their journeys out of the abusive relationships.
Bio: Sundari Anitha is Chair in Sociological Studies at the University of Sheffield, UK. She has researched and published widely across the two areas of violence against women and girls and the intersection of gender, race and ethnicity in employment relations. She was previously a caseworker/manager at domestic violence refuges in the UK and has been engaged in activism, advocacy and policy-making on violence against women for over 25 years.
Co-organised by CIE and Centre for Cultures of Reproduction, Technologies and Health (CORTH).
Centre for International Education (Sussex Centre of Excellence)
cie@sussex.ac.uk / www.sussex.ac.uk/cie / CIE/MAIED LinkedIn
By: Eve Wilcox
Last updated: Wednesday, 25 March 2026