To Specify or Single Out: Should We Use the Term “Honor Killing”?
The use of the term ‘honor killing’ has elicited strong reactions from a variety of groups for years; but the recent Aqsa Parvez and Aasiya Hassan cases have brought a renewed interest from women’s rights activists, community leaders, and law enforcement to study the term and come to a consensus on its validity and usefulness, particularly in the North American and European Diaspora. While some aver that the term ‘honor killing’ is an appropriate description of a unique and particular crime, others deem it as rather a racist and misleading phrase used to promote violent stereotypes of particular communities, particularly Muslim minorities in North America and Europe.This article works to lay the groundwork by presenting both sides of the debate over the term ‘honor killing’ and analyzing the arguments various groups use in order to justify their particular definition of the term, and if and how they support its use in public discourse. I argue two main points: one, that ‘honor killing’ exists as a specific form of violence against women, having particular characteristics that warrants its classification as a unique category of violence. Second, I show that while ‘honor killings’ are recognized as such in many non-Western contexts, there is a trend among advocacy organizations in the North American and European Diaspora to avoid, ignore, or rebuke the term ‘honor killings’ as a misleading label that is racist, xenophobic, and/or harmful to Muslim populations. This is a direct response to misuse of the term mostly within media outlets and public discourse that serves to further marginalize Muslim and immigrant groups.
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Download the full paper here | 400.78 KB |
Related News
- Petition against Vatican`s miscategorization of Women’s Rights Advocates with Child Abusers
- Catholics denounce Vatican putting female ordination on par with sex abuse
- Revised Vatican norms to cover sex abuse and attempted women's ordination
- Women point to biases in Koranic exegesis
- A Female Approach to Peacekeeping
Related Resources
- Advancing Gender Justice: A Call to Action
- Girls Speak: A New Voice In Global Development
- Video: Concluding remarks - Independent Expert on Cultural rights' first report to the UN Human Rights Council
- A Catalogue of International Human Rights Instruments
- Reparations for Women Subjected to Violence: First thematic report submitted to the HRC by Rashida Manjoo, Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences, 19 April 2010