“That’s the way men are over there. They are not like us.” “Violence against women is personal, so there’s nothing we or our government can do.”
I have heard all these excuses, and more, for why the United States is not more involved in fighting the global epidemic of violence against women that continues unabated. An estimated one out of every three women worldwide will be beaten, coerced into sex or otherwise abused during her lifetime—with rates reaching 70% in some countries. Rape continues to be used as a weapon of war, and in many places, the first sexual experience for up to 30% of women will be forced.
These are chilling numbers, so let’s take a moment in honor of International Women’s Day 2014 to name and debunk some of the most widespread myths about violence against women, so as not to allow them to block progress.
Myth 1: Violence against women primarily occurs in non-Western countries and can be blamed on regressive cultural beliefs about gender.
Tragically, violence against women occurs in epidemic proportions throughout the world, including in the United States. It is estimated that more than 42 million women in the United States will experience physical violence, rape, and/or stalking by an intimate partner during their lifetimes.
This violence occurs not just in cultures or contexts where women are universally oppressed. It happens in every part of the world and in every society.
Of course, countries and regions differ, and cultural, political and economic differences and the impact of disasters can have a significant effect on how violence against women unfolds.
For instance, the widespread destruction and chaos in the wake of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti created the conditions for an enormous increase in violence against women and girls, which continues today.
With hundreds of thousands of people displaced from their homes and living in camps with little security, few economic resources, limited access to the justice system, rape and sexual assault continue to occur with impunity.
By way of another example, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has come to be known as the “rape capital of the world” because of the protracted military and political conflict and the use of rape as a weapon of war, which has been documented for centuries across continents.
Myth 2: Sexual violence is a “women’s issue.”
First of all, sexual violence does not only happen to women. While it is overwhelmingly men who perpetrate sexual violence against women, survivors of sexual violence often include men and boys. In fact, international studies show that up to 10% of men report experiencing childhood sexual abuse, and some evidence suggests that the rates of sexual violence may be even higher for gay, bisexual and transgender men.









