The Role of Women’s Movements in the Implementation of Gender- Based Violence Laws
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Cambridge University Press
Abstract
The question of whether social movements can catalyze change has preoccupied
researchers but an understanding of how such change can be created is equally
important. Specifically, there has been little investigation of how women’s movements
engage in the process of implementation of women’s rights laws. We use a case study of
Ghana’s Domestic Violence Coalition to examine the challenges that movements face in
the policy implementation process. The Domestic Violence Coalition, a collective of
women’s rights organizations, was instrumental to the passage of Ghana’s Domestic
Violence Act in 2007. Our study investigates the coalition’s subsequent attempts to
influence the act’s implementation. Drawing from the social movement literature, we
apply an analytical framework consisting of three internal factors (strategies, movement
infrastructure, and framing) and two external factors (political context and support of
allies) that have mediated the coalition’s impact on implementation. We find that
changes in movement infrastructure are most significant in explaining the coalition’s relative ineffectiveness, as these changes adversely affect its ability to employ effective
strategies and take advantage of a conducive political context and the presence of allies.
This article advances the literature on rights advocacy by women’s movements by
analyzing the challenge of translating success in policy adoption to implementation and
explaining why women’s movements may have less impact on implementation processes.
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Research Article