MALE VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC ABUSE SLIGHTED.Byline: Glenn Sacks Glenn Sacks is an American men's and fathers' issues columnist and radio broadcaster. He is the first columnist specializing in men's and fathers' issues to be published regularly in Top 100 American newspapers. LOCAL VIEW WHEN Jack Barnes' wife attacked him by surprise and gouged deep, painful scratches into his eyes with her nails, he knew he needed to get out, and he knew he needed help. But he found that little help was available. Why? Because he's male. ``I got out of the hospital, and I had nowhere to go. I called the county domestic violence hotline, and they told me the only shelter that accepts abused men in all of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. County is in Lancaster. I work in downtown Los Angeles Downtown Los Angeles is the central business district of Los Angeles, California, located close to the geographic center of the metropolitan area. The sprawling, multi-centered megacity is such that its downtown core is often considered just another district like Hollywood or - 80 miles away. With rush-hour traffic, it would take me two or three hours each way to commute to work. And how would my kids stay in school?'' While Los Angeles County funds two dozen shelters for victims of domestic violence, the only shelter that accepts male victims is the Valley Oasis shelter in Lancaster. Former Oasis Director Patricia Overberg, who courageously changed shelter policy in order to accept male domestic violence victims in the late 1980s, says that what L.A. County is doing is discriminatory and illegal, and that it is leaving itself vulnerable to a class-action lawsuit. ``I've seen men travel 100 miles each way to receive services that were available to women in their own neighborhoods but not to them,'' she says. ``This is an important human-rights issue.'' Valley Oasis' current director, Carol Ensign, argues powerfully for increased funds for shelters, services and outreach for men. ``The research and evidence couldn't be clearer - domestic abuse of men is a problem similar in magnitude to that of abuse of women,'' she says. ``Forty years ago, the abuse of women was veiled in shame and secrecy. We've moved light years ahead since in gaining recognition, acceptance and help for battered women. Yet we bury male victimization victimization Social medicine The abuse of the disenfranchised–eg, those underage, elderly, ♀, mentally retarded, illegal aliens, or other, by coercing them into illegal activities–eg, drug trade, pornography, prostitution. . We need to reach out to male victims. We need to teach them to ask for help. And society needs to see that yes, very often it is the 6-foot-2-inch male who is the one getting attacked by his 5-foot-5-inch wife.'' Ensign has a large body of research on her side. Veteran domestic violence researchers Richard Gelles, Murray Straus and Susan Steinmetz, who were once hailed by the women's movement women's movement: see feminism; woman suffrage. women's movement Diverse social movement, largely based in the U.S., seeking equal rights and opportunities for women in their economic activities, personal lives, and politics. for their pioneering work on violence against women, have repeatedly found that women are just as likely as men to physically attack their spouses or partners. California State University Enrollment Studies by researchers R.I. McNeeley and Coramae Richey Mann Coramae Richey Mann (1931–2004) was a professor emeritus of criminal justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She argued vehemently that the United States criminal justice system was racist. show that women frequently compensate for their smaller size by employing the element of surprise and using weapons, often including guns, knives, boiling water, bricks, fireplace pokers and baseball bats. Crime statistics indicate large imbalances in the number of domestic violence incidents against men and women largely because, as studies have shown, an abused woman is many times more likely to report abuse than an abused man. Many men hesitate to call the police because they assume, often correctly, that the police will automatically treat them as if they are the perpetrator A term commonly used by law enforcement officers to designate a person who actually commits a crime. . Activists from Stop Abuse for Everyone (SAFE), a nonprofit group dedicated to expanding services for all victims of domestic violence (male or female), have taken the issue to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is the five member governing board of Los Angeles County, California. Members of the board of supervisors are elected by district, the current members as of April 2006 are:
According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. attorney Marc Angelucci, the California chairman of SAFE, while some officials seem cautiously sympathetic, none so far have been willing to come out firmly in support of getting help for abused men. Deputies for Supervisors Mike Antonovich Mike Antonovich might refer to:
Male domestic violence victims like Mark Grayson, a San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills. educator who was attacked by his ex-wife on several occasions, bristle at the idea that the county has to investigate to see whether or not abused men's needs are being met when there is only one, distant shelter willing to accept them. ``When I tried to get help it felt as if I first had to prove that we (male victims) exist,'' he says. ``When my ex-wife stabbed me in the back with a piece of silverware, instead of going to the hospital I should have gone to the county supervisors with the silverware still stuck in my back. Maybe then they would have seen that male victims need help too.'' |
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