
Domestic Violence and the Rights
of Women in Japan and the United States
By Juley A. Fulcher
Violence against women is a violation
of a woman’s physical and mental dignity as well as her freedom of movement,
and as such is a grave infringement of a woman’s human rights.
— Mioko Fujieda, from Some Thoughts
on Domestic Violence in Japan, Rev. of Japanese Culture and Soc.,
Dec. 1989.
Domestic violence went largely unrecognized
by Japanese society and unaddressed by the Japanese government until
the early 1990s. Through a couple of highly publicized cases of extreme
violence against women, advocates finally began to capture the attention
of the country. The Domestic Violence Action and Research Group, a nongovernmental
group of activists, practitioners, and researchers seized the opportunity
to conduct a nationwide survey of the experiences of violence in women’s
lives. The results demonstrated what Japanese women had known for years—that
domestic violence is a serious problem in Japan.
This certainly garnered the attention of
the Japanese public but it was the influence of the international community
and the framework of women’s rights as human rights that arguably fueled
the beginnings of policy changes in the Japanese government. The Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action adopted at the 1993 United Nations
World Conference on Human Rights explicitly recognized domestic violence
and other forms of violence against women as human rights violations.
In the years that followed, Japan began paying greater attention to
women’s issues and domestic violence, in particular. An increasing willingness
to fund services for women led to the current operation of more than
forty shelters and eighty-seven counseling centers for battered women
throughout the country. Though this number is admittedly small in a
country with one-quarter the population of the United States, it is
part of the growing system of services available to battered women in
Japan including legal services and crisis hotlines.
In 2000, Japan’s Council for Gender Equality
(a government office that has since been elevated to its current position
within the cabinet office of the prime minister) issued a report defining
violence against women as a violation of Article 14 of the Japanese
Constitution guaranteeing equal rights between the sexes. The Council’s
report cites to numerous United Nations documents as a basis for its
approach, including The Vienna Declaration of Human Rights and Programme
of Action (United Nations, 1985), the Beijing Declaration and Platform
for Action (United Nations, 1995), and Further Actions and Initiatives
to Implement the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (United
Nations, 2000).
By all accounts, the United State’s system
is years ahead of the Japanese system in addressing domestic violence.
The first state laws specifically making wife beating illegal were passed
in 1871 (though proliferation of laws to all states and enforcement
of those laws lagged very far behind). The first battered women’s shelter
opened in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1973. A nationwide Domestic Violence
Awareness Month public education campaign has been an annual occurrence
during the month of October since 1987 and today, more than 2,000 shelters
providing services to battered women are in operation across the United
States. Yet, domestic violence continues to occur. Nearly one in three
women in the United States experiences at least one physical assault
by a partner during adulthood (American Psychological Association, 1996).
According to the National Institute of Justice Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, approximately 4.8 million intimate partner rapes
and physical assaults are perpetrated against U.S. women annually (Tjaden
& Thoenes, 2000). And, like in Japan, one-third of women killed
each year in the United States are murdered by their intimate partners
(Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2001 and Yoshihama, 2002). Clearly the
United States has, so far, been unsuccessful in its efforts to eradicate
domestic violence.
Perhaps the problem lies in the framework.
Efforts to change laws and policies in the United States have relied
on the politically palatable frameworks of criminal justice and family
values, both of which fail to adequately address domestic violence at
its core. The idea of family values is often rooted in a patriarchal
notion of chivalry—the husband and father as protector of the family.
Wife beating and child abuse are therefore viewed as cowardly actions
in which a man violates a sacred trust by preying on those who rely
on his protection. This framework is anathema to viewing women as equal
to men. It propagates the defined gender roles that batterers often
use to defend their actions. The family values approach also fails to
adequately conceptualize the diversity of intimate partner violence.
Such violence can and does occur in dating relationships (both adult
couples and couples in which one or both partners is under the age of
eighteen) in which there may be no economic reliance or legal relationship
to the batterer. It also occurs in same-sex relationships and in relationships
that have long since been severed by divorce or the end of cohabitation.
The result is that many state and federal laws and policies have failed
to adequately address the populations victimized by domestic violence.
In fact, half of the states currently do not have laws making the full
range of domestic violence protections available to victims in dating
relationships.
The criminal justice approach has had similar
drawbacks. Domestic violence is a pattern of behavior that takes place
within an intimate relationship. The pattern often includes repeated
physical violence, intimidation, threats (spoken and unspoken), economic
abuse, emotional abuse, controlling behavior (limiting the victim’s
ability to work or move freely in society), irrational jealousy, stalking,
harassment at work or at school, and threats to harm the victims’ children,
family members, friends, or pets. Our criminal justice system, on the
other hand is designed to address single incidents of criminal behavior.
In fact, principles of criminal justice demand that such incidents be
considered in a vacuum, independent of past behavior of the defendant
and independent of the prior relationship between the defendant and
victim. It is little wonder that such a system has difficulty adequately
responding to the pattern of behavior typical of domestic violence.
Moreover, the criminal justice approach often leads to victim blaming.
A system that thinks in terms of a single criminal act has difficulty
comprehending a victim who does not immediately remove herself from
a situation where she is likely to be victimized again. A system that
is designed to deal with street violence among strangers is not adequately
structured to respond to violence in families and intimate relationships.
Moreover, the criminal justice approach
has resulted in the backlash of dual arrests—police arresting both parties
when called on a "domestic dispute." The dual arrest problem
was fueled by both an unwillingness of police officers to view domestic
violence as a crime as well as poor legal definitions of domestic violence.
Once the criminal and civil laws on domestic violence were created,
years of struggle began to try to force the system to work including
mandatory arrest laws, mandatory police and judicial training, and definitions
and redefinitions of primary or predominant aggressor.
So laws, policies, and public education
based on domestic violence as a violation of family values or as a criminal
justice problem have not been adequate to end the violence or address
the needs of victims. But what of the human rights framework? Take,
for instance, Article 3 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(Universal Declaration), which states that "[e]veryone has the
right to life, liberty and security of person." Or, Article 13
of the Universal Declaration, which states that "[e]veryone has
the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of
each State." Or, Article 2 of the Universal Declaration which states
that "[e]veryone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms [in
the Declaration] without distinction of any kind." These rights
are not unique to the Universal Declaration. They can be found in other
major human rights treaties such as the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights and the Convention to End All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW). Applied to domestic violence victims they can
offer powerful protections.
What if we work from the basic assumption
that it is the right of all individuals to be free from the violence,
coercion, restriction of movement, and assault on dignity associated
with domestic violence? Such an approach commands us to examine and
address the heart of the problem, including those negatively impacted
by it. The family values approach to domestic violence focuses on the
negative consequences for a family and the criminal justice approach
focuses on the negative impact on society, but the human rights approach
focuses us on those whose rights are being violated, allowing us to
develop solutions that keep victims’ experiences and needs at the forefront.
Domestic and sexual violence are human
rights violations disproportionately committed against women. Domestic
and sexual violence are integral aspects of the lives of women in the
United States and around the world. Even if we have not been directly
victimized by these crimes, we have been indirectly victimized—constantly
aware of the dangers and adjusting our work, school, and social lives
to guard against such victimization. CEDAW recognizes this and calls
on governments to effectively address it. To date, 170 countries have
ratified the treaty and are working under its framework to improve the
lives of women and girls around the world. Shamefully, the United States
is not one of those countries. Ratification of CEDAW would help both
in protecting women’s human rights and in preventing violations of these
human rights. Although CEDAW does not explicitly address violence against
women, the CEDAW Committee, in General Recommendation No. 19, declared
in Article 6 that "[t]he definition of discrimination includes
gender-based violence, that is, violence that is directed against a
woman because she is a woman or that affects women disproportionately."
Japan is often considered by both Americans
and Japanese to be less advanced than the United States in affording
equal status to women. Certainly, Japanese laws, policies, and systems
for addressing domestic violence lag far behind those of the United
States. However, with a framework that includes the ratification of
CEDAW and other treaties on women’s human rights, a cabinet level office
on gender equality, and a governmental statement that domestic violence
is a violation of the constitutional guarantee of equal rights for women,
Japan may have set the stage for creating a more effective solution
to the problem.
Juley A. Fulcher is the public policy
director for the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence where
she works on federal legislation and policies that promote the interests
of battered women and their children, as well as public education and
initiatives to reduce societal violence and oppression.
Author’s Note: At the time of writing
this article, Juley A. Fulcher was conducting a period of residence
in Japan studying the laws, policies, and systems relating to domestic
violence under a fellowship from the Japan Society. The author acknowledges
the commitment and dedication of the many women in both Japan and the
United States who have devoted their intellects and their energies to
creating the important advances for women in both countries that are
so briefly described in this article. Hopefully, future advances will
build upon their foundation.