- Teenage girls are more likely to hit
boys than hit other girls and see violence as a natural part of their everyday
lives rather than a rare event, research has revealed.
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- In the first British inquiry of its kind,
studying how girls use and understand violence, researchers found that
far from the traditional view that women feel guilty about using physical
violence, girls feel empowered.
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- Dr Michele Burman, a sociology lecturer
at the University of Glasgow who is heading the two-year project funded
by the Economic and Social Research Council, said many girls in the study
witnessed violence nearly every day. It structured much of the social interaction
between young people.
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- "Many girls see physical fighting
with one another, but particularly with boys, as entirely appropriate gender
behaviour," said Dr Burman, speaking at the Roots of Violence in Children
and Young People Conference at the Royal Society of Medicine.
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- "Many girls have an idea of the
usefulness of violence or, perhaps more accurately, the usefulness of the
threat of violence. Defending themselves proved a coherent and consistent
justification for violent and aggressive responses," she said.
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- Contrary to popular belief that girls
are violent towards each other, the findings revealed that girls, especially
those aged 15 and below, thought boys were major irritants and therefore
legitimate targets.
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- Girl gangs and court cases where girls
have been reported torturing their victims have increased public concern
about violence in young women.
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- Although the number of incidents of women
committing violent crime is small compared with men - only 8,600 compared
with 49,600 for men in 1997 - official statistics show numbers have doubled
since the 1970s.
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- One study reported that one in three
boys and one in five girls got into arguments or fights after drinking.
A survey of offences committed by young people showed that violence represented
12 per cent of all young women's offences and 9 per cent of all young men's.
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- The researchers interviewed 550 girls,
aged 13 to 16, from different social and economic backgrounds in Scotland.
They found a great deal of physical interaction between girls. "The
games played by girls frequently involved play fighting, dead arm punching
and wrist burns," said Dr Burman.
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- Apart from all sexual violence, girls
found physical or emotional violence from an adult to a child the most
unacceptable.
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