Oliveira, Anderson Eduardo Carvalho de; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4020-1478; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4962413127912894
Resumo:
Since the 1980s, works have been cataloged worldwide with men who perpetrated violence
against women as a strategy for addressing this serious form of violation of human rights. In
Brazil, the debates about education and accountability services to men perpetrators of
violence gained strength from the edition of Law No. 11.340 / 2006 - Maria da Penha Law
that, in its core, incorporated such perspective. However, feminist literature on the subject is
still scarce, not only because it is recent, but mainly because it has never been central to
feminist and women's movements. In an attempt to minimize this gap, I seek to analyze
feminist perceptions about the accountability and education services for men who have
committed violence against women. To this end, I use document analysis and semi-structured
and semi-directional interviews conducted with people who identify themselves as feminists
and with participation work in the formulation / monitoring processes of the Maria da Penha
Law or implementation of these services and programs. In the end, besides pointing to the
insufficiency of the punitive answers given by the criminal justice system, I present
fundamental aspects to the construction of a solid and effective model of intervention with
male perpetrators of violence.