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Why domestic violence keeps rising


1. Crises, Stress and Isolation

Pandemics & Lockdowns

Events like the COVID-19 pandemic created a โ€œshadow pandemicโ€ of domestic violence. Forced lock-downs trapped potential victims with abusers, shrinking opportunities to seek help or escape. Routine disruptions, loss of income, and soaring stressโ€”especially in economically vulnerable familiesโ€”amplified aggression and conflict.

Natural Disasters & Crises

Historical data still show spikes in domestic violence following disastersโ€”such as after earthquakes or hurricanes. For instance, abuse reports surged after Hurricane Katrina and the Mount St. Helens eruption.

2. Economic Insecurity and Power Imbalances

Financial hardship erodes stability. Economic anxietyโ€”triggered by unemployment or inflationโ€”heightens tensions at home. Some abusers may react violently when their identity or societal role is threatened.

In places with restrictive abortion laws, studies show a 7โ€“10% rise in intimate partner violence, as women are trapped in abusive relationships by financial dependencies or legal constraints.

3. Technological Tools Fueling Abuse

Advances in technology, while powerful, are increasingly wielded for harm. There’s been a dramatic increaseโ€”700% in Sydneyโ€”of domestic violence involving digital surveillance tools: spyware, GPS trackers concealed in personal items like toys, and covert use of devices to monitor victims.

4. Greater Awareness and Reporting

Some of the increase in cases reported reflects higher levels of public awareness and willingness to report abuse. Movements like #MeToo and enhanced training for health and workplace professionals have encouraged survivors to come forward.

In Queensland, for example, domestic violence breaches recently overtook drug offenses for the first timeโ€”not only due to actual rise but also because more victims felt supported enough to report.

Domestic violence keeps increasing post-covid

5. Normalization of Violence via Culture & Media

Younger people, particularly in Australia, have shown troubling normalization of abusive behavior influenced by misogynistic contentโ€”like pornography and influencer cultureโ€”linking phenomena like strangulation during sex to what they’re consuming online.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4iOpNZJ_ZQU

In the UK, coercive control and physical threatsโ€”especially strangulationโ€”against women aged 16โ€“25 have risen significantly (9% increase in strangulation or suffocation cases).

6. Societal & Legal System Limitations

Cultural Justifications

In some communities, harmful traditional or cultural justifications for domestic violence persist, such as in parts of Australia where customary law is misused to rationalize abuse.

Latin America also grapples with deep-rooted machismo and gender roles that tacitly condone violence against women as โ€œdisciplineโ€.

Resource Constraints

Cuts in funding and shelter services leave survivors with nowhere to turn. For example, freezes on funding for domestic violence programs in some regions have severely limited survivor options. Even where protective laws exist (e.g. Nigeriaโ€™s VAPP Act), enforcement is often weakโ€”only about 12% of reported cases result in convictions.

7. Youth Exposure & Intergenerational Effects

Domestic violence begets domestic violence. In areas like Mount Isa, Australia, rampant family violence is closely linked to youth crime, pointing to the multi-generational trauma resulting from exposure to abuse.

8. Seasonal and Situational Spikes

Domestic violence tends to spike during high-stress periods like Christmasโ€”when families are together and typical escape routes (work, school) are closed offโ€”all aggravated by alcohol and financial pressures.

In view of all these, we’ve also compiled a summary of the above. Take a quick look at it below.


Summary: Multiple Interacting Causes

Domestic violence is rising due to a web of interlinked factors:

  1. Crisis-driven vulnerability โ€” lockdowns, disasters, pandemics.
  2. Economic strain โ€” job loss, poverty, restricted reproductive rights.
  3. Digital tools weaponized โ€” technology enabling remote control and surveillance.
  4. Increased reporting โ€” growing awareness and reduced stigma.
  5. Cultural norms โ€” misogyny and traditional gender expectations.
  6. Insufficient legal and support infrastructure.
  7. Perpetuation across generations.
  8. Context-specific surges โ€” holidays, social isolation periods.

Why It Matters โ€“ Turning Insight into Action

Understanding these drivers is critical to crafting effective responses:

  • Strengthen support infrastructure โ€” shelters, helplines, legal aid.
  • Economic empowerment โ€” financial supports to reduce dependency.
  • Digital safeguarding โ€” laws against digital abuse, tech literacy.
  • Education & awareness โ€” healthy relationship teaching, media literacy.
  • Legal reform & enforcement โ€” remove cultural loopholes, ensure accountability.
  • Cultural change โ€” challenge norms that excuse or normalize abuse.

This is a complex, multifaceted crisisโ€”requiring coordinated societal, legal, and policy responses across economic, cultural, and technological domains. We hope that issues of domestic violence will reduce in the future.


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