‘I pretend to be an ideal woman just to keep their mouths shut’: Bangladeshi women’s contestation of abuse through social media platforms

IF 5.1 3区 管理学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Hannah Klose, Lubna Jebin
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Abstract

ABSTRACTThe current paper examines how women in Bangladesh contest abuse within patriarchal systems of control. In many cases, women will often decide the extent to which they adopt a particular technology to prevent experiences of abuse on social media platforms. In the current study, we analysed how women's online presence is controlled by patriarchal norms which impede their agency and recontextualise their empowerment through social media. As such, we rely on the narratives of three women in Dhaka, Bangladesh to understand how they exercise agency on social media platforms to ensure their own empowerment and avoid (further) experiences of abuse. Although we recognise that ICT for Development (ICT4D) can be a crucial way to ensure women’s empowerment, we argue that, as a male-dominated space, social media platforms promote restrictive and unequal gender stereotypes that require women to find alternative strategies to challenge and resist existing patriarchal structures.KEYWORDS: Abuseempowermentagencymale-dominated spacewomensocial media platforms AcknowledgementsThe authors are grateful to the interview participants for giving their time and providing their expertize. Their insights, knowledge and experiences have been incredibly valuable to this study. Thank you also to Kylie Martin and Professor JaneMaree Maher for providing insightful feedback which has assisted in the further development of the central arguments and theoretical framework.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 A length of material worn over the chest and thrown back around the shoulders, typically with a salwar kameez, by women from South Asia (Oxford learner’s dictionaries)2 Bangladeshi synonyms for prostitute.Additional informationNotes on contributorsHannah KloseHannah Klose is a PhD Candidate in Criminology at Monash University and a Teaching Associate at RMIT University. Hannah’s PhD examines girls’ and young women's individual experiences of online gender-based violence (OGBV) perpetrated through social media platforms. Drawing on a continuum framework, her thesis specifically focusses on how girls and young women understand and respond to their experiences of OGBV.Lubna JebinLubna Jebin is an Associate Professor in Public Administration at Jagannath University, Dhaka, Bangladesh and a PhD Candidate in Sociology, Monash University, Australia. Her doctoral research is on Bangladeshi women’s experiences of violence in the Saudi Arabian paid domestic labour regime. Lubna’s particular focus is on gendered labour, women’s body, gendered violence, and women’s strategic negotiation practices.
“我假装自己是一个理想的女人,只是为了让她们闭嘴”:孟加拉国女性在社交媒体平台上对虐待的争论
摘要本文考察了孟加拉国妇女如何在父权控制体系下对抗虐待。在许多情况下,女性通常会决定她们采用某种特定技术的程度,以防止在社交媒体平台上遭受虐待。在当前的研究中,我们分析了女性在网上的存在是如何受到父权规范的控制的,父权规范阻碍了她们的能动性,并通过社交媒体重新定义了她们的赋权。因此,我们依靠孟加拉国达卡三名女性的叙述来理解她们如何在社交媒体平台上行使权力,以确保自己的权力,并避免(进一步)遭受虐待。尽管我们认识到ICT促进发展(ICT4D)可以是确保妇女赋权的关键途径,但我们认为,作为男性主导的空间,社交媒体平台促进了限制性和不平等的性别刻板印象,要求女性寻找替代策略来挑战和抵制现有的父权制结构。关键词:虐待、赋权、机构、男性主导的空间、女性、社交媒体平台感谢访谈参与者的宝贵时间和专业知识。他们的见解、知识和经验对这项研究非常有价值。同时感谢Kylie Martin和JaneMaree Maher教授提供的有见地的反馈,这些反馈有助于中心论点和理论框架的进一步发展。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1:南亚妇女穿在胸前并向后绕在肩膀上的一段布料,通常配上沙瓦卡米兹(牛津学习词典)作者简介:hannah Klose是莫纳什大学犯罪学博士候选人,同时也是RMIT大学的助教。汉娜的博士研究了女孩和年轻女性通过社交媒体平台遭受网络性别暴力(OGBV)的个人经历。在连续体框架的基础上,她的论文特别关注女孩和年轻女性如何理解和应对她们的OGBV经历。Lubna Jebin,孟加拉国达卡贾格纳特大学公共行政副教授,澳大利亚莫纳什大学社会学博士研究生。她的博士研究是关于孟加拉国妇女在沙特阿拉伯有偿家务劳动制度下遭受暴力的经历。Lubna特别关注性别劳动、妇女身体、性别暴力和妇女的战略谈判实践。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: Information Technology for Development , with an established record for publishing quality research and influencing practice, is the first journal to have explicitly addressed global information technology issues and opportunities. It publishes social and technical research on the effects of Information Technology (IT) on economic, social and human development. The objective of the Journal is to provide a forum for policy-makers, practitioners, and academics to discuss strategies and best practices, tools and techniques for ascertaining the effects of IT infrastructures in government, civil societies and the private sector, and theories and frameworks that explain the effects of IT on development. The concept of development relates to social, economic and human outcomes from the implementation of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) tools, technologies, and infrastructures. In addition to being a valuable publication in the field of information systems, Information Technology for Development is also cited in fields such as public administration, economics, and international development and business, and has a particularly large readership in international agencies connected to the Commonwealth Secretariat, United Nations, and World Bank.
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