Article
Domestic Violence in
Assam: Socio-structural
Dynamics
Joanna Mahjebeen
1
Conventional wisdom would have us believe that Assam is a state where the status
of women is comparatively better off than that of their counterparts in the rest of
India, that they suffer from fewer instances of domestic violence. The geographical
contiguity of a region which contains some matrilineal tribal societies, significant
female mobility, and a near absence of practices such as dowry or sati as part of
tradition, might lend some credibility to this belief. However, present indicators and
crime statistics have actually shown a high incidence of overall crimes against women
in Assam. A complex socio-political milieu, characterised by increasing militarism and
insurgency, continuing ethnic and group conflicts in an overall environment where
‘market forces’ dominate, has in its own way posed serious challenges to the security
of women and led to the opening up of more and more ‘violent spaces’ –the home
being one one of them. The present study endeavours to explore the socio-structural
dynamics and contexts rooted in Assam that perpetuate domestic violence against
women. The study underscores the necessity of informed policy-level interventions
and a holistic approach to address structural constraints that underpin such violence.
Keywords
Domestic violence, wife beating, dowry death, violent space, patriarchy
Introduction
Domestic or family violence is increasingly being recognised as the most pervasive
yet the most silenced form of gender-based violence. Understood simply as
Social Change
1–15
© CSD 2019
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DOI: 10.1177/0049085719853731
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1
Department of Political Science, Gauhati University, Guwahati, Assam, India.
Corresponding author
Joanna Mahjebeen, Department of Political Science, Gauhati University, Guwahati 781014, Assam,
India.
Email jmahjebeen@gmail.com