However, powerful social and economic alterations may extremely modify behaviors. Additionally, such situations invite various professionals in joining in with productive and mutual efforts to combat all forms of harm and domestic violence by tackling structural causes of domestic violence to improve outcomes for all women victims and survivors. Stark says, “For the millions of women who are assaulted or coercively controlled by their partners, the law is just when it becomes part of their safety zone; when they experience a synchronicity between their struggle to be free of their partner and their larger struggle to realize their capacity as women; when being in the law, calling the police, or appearing before a judge, or turning to child welfare, or entering a health center or a shelter becomes for them a “moment of autonomy” in which their voice is not only heard but magnified; and when their personal power, which they have been made to feel is a liability for too long, is suddenly recognized as a political asset” (Stark 401). Hence, in order for advancement toward changes that are more comprehensive than the overall concentration on physical domestic violence alone, one must evaluate a attentiveness on continuing to protect women from all forms of abuse that effect a women in their personal environments. Additionally, further research on the outcomes effects of domestic violence should primarily ensure the beginning of positive changes in outcomes and in planning interventions, as well as an inclusion of reexamination of policies that are narrowing down to the effects of abuse which are currently lacking in order to empower, educate, and create new easily accessible resources for women, as well as to assist to
However, powerful social and economic alterations may extremely modify behaviors. Additionally, such situations invite various professionals in joining in with productive and mutual efforts to combat all forms of harm and domestic violence by tackling structural causes of domestic violence to improve outcomes for all women victims and survivors. Stark says, “For the millions of women who are assaulted or coercively controlled by their partners, the law is just when it becomes part of their safety zone; when they experience a synchronicity between their struggle to be free of their partner and their larger struggle to realize their capacity as women; when being in the law, calling the police, or appearing before a judge, or turning to child welfare, or entering a health center or a shelter becomes for them a “moment of autonomy” in which their voice is not only heard but magnified; and when their personal power, which they have been made to feel is a liability for too long, is suddenly recognized as a political asset” (Stark 401). Hence, in order for advancement toward changes that are more comprehensive than the overall concentration on physical domestic violence alone, one must evaluate a attentiveness on continuing to protect women from all forms of abuse that effect a women in their personal environments. Additionally, further research on the outcomes effects of domestic violence should primarily ensure the beginning of positive changes in outcomes and in planning interventions, as well as an inclusion of reexamination of policies that are narrowing down to the effects of abuse which are currently lacking in order to empower, educate, and create new easily accessible resources for women, as well as to assist to