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Exploring the Data: The Prevalence of Gender-based Violence in Latin America

How Prevalent is Gender-Based Violence?

Globally, gender-based violence affects one in three women during her lifetime. A staggering  of women who are murdered are killed by a male intimate partner. As the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime , these killings "are rarely spontaneous or random, and should be examined as an extreme act on a continuum of gender-related violence that remains underreported and too often ignored."

Good data is a critical step in understanding the full scope and scale of femicide, and at the heart of a sound and sustainable public policy response. As part of this project, we have have gathered and made available below national (and sometimes sub-national) level data on femicide in Latin America. Far too often we encountered data that was incomplete or inconsistent鈥攐r simply missing鈥攍eaving us, along with policymakers and the public at large, with a murky view of the problem. Going forward, it is clear any national or regional effort to address femicide and gender-based violence more broadly must include new data standards for collecting and compiling gender-based violence data. Without it, our understanding of the problem鈥攁nd thus our capacity to develop responsive and comprehensive policy solutions鈥攚ill remain incomplete.

An Interactive Exploration of GBV Data in Latin America

The following five dashboards (two of Latin America, and one each focusing on Mexico, El Salvador, and Brazil) are interactive, allowing you as the user to explore the data and get a sense for the reality of gender-based violence in Latin America.

The data is available for download (click the lower-right corner of each dashboard); you can also share the dashboards on social media or through other platforms.

Understanding Gender-based Violence Data

A Shadow Pandemic: Gender-Based Violence and COVID-19

Even before the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic, the home was a place of fear for many women and girls living in situations of violence. In Latin Americ, occur in the victim鈥檚 home.

The quarantine and stay-at-home orders that governments adopted to address COVID-19 trapped many women with their abusers; evidence from early on in the pandemic reinforces the urgency of this issue. ORMUSA, or Organizaci贸n de Mujeres Salvadore帽a, in El Salvador reported in the first 6 weeks of quarantine between March 17 and April 29, 2020. In Argentina, and girls were killed because of their gender between March 20 and July 7. In the month of March 2020, were recorded in just six states in Brazil. These statistics are alarming as the virus continues to spread across the Americas, raising fears that extended lockdowns will continue to exacerbate gender-based violence while governments struggle to address the twin public health crises.

In response, many governments are looking to digital solutions to improve access to the criminal justice system during the pandemic. In Brazil, the government launched an on government website for the Ministry of Women, Family and Human Rights for victims to report violence. The state governments of S茫o Paulo, Esp铆rito Santo, and Rio de Janeiro have also made available an online platform for victims of violence to file charges online and these reports have been prioritized by the courts. As much as these e-governance initiatives help victims access the justice system, there is much more to be done to proactively protect vulnerable populations during the pandemic and prevent violence.

GBV in Mexico

In Mexico as a result of femicide, a rate that has increased 137 percent since 2015鈥攆our times that of other homicides. In recent years, feminicides are increasingly public with women鈥檚 corpses left on display, sometimes with visible signs of torture or beatings. The killings of Ingrid Escamilla and Fatima Aldrighetti, who was only 7 years old when her life was taken, shocked the public in early 2020. Ms. Escamilla鈥檚 body had been found horribly mutilated by her partner and photos of her body were leaked on social media and the press, sparking outrage as protesters demanded an end to impunity for feminicides; of feminicides are prosecuted and a mere 1 percent are sentenced.  A report issued by the Secretariat of Home Affairs, the National Institute for Women, and UN Women examining data spanning from 1985-2016 found that women victims are likely to die from strangulation, hanging, suffocation or drowning than men and 1.3 times more likely to die by stabbing. In Mexico, femicide is more than an epidemic, it is a scare tactic.

Experiences of violence are all too commonplace for Mexican women. In 2016, the National Statistics Office (INEGI), conducted a survey of relationship dynamics of more than 142,000 households across the country and a dizzying surveyed reported experiencing violence in her lifetime. Half of women reported experiencing emotional violence and four out of 10 women reported experiencing sexual violence. Nearly reported experiencing violence from an intimate partner. Violence against women across Mexico persists and in its most extreme form, feminicide, has resulted in senseless deaths. In 2019, the Executive Secretariat of the National Public Security System (SESNSP) registered .

The treatment of feminicide as a crime separate from homicide is a relatively recent phenomenon.  In 2010, the state of Guerrero and Cuidad de Mexico were the first to criminalize feminicide. In 2012, of the federal penal code in Mexico criminalized feminicide across the country and is applied in the following circumstances:

鈥淚. The victim shows signs of sexual violence of any kind;

II. The victim has been inflicted with inflammatory or degrading injuries or mutilations, prior to or following the deprivation of life or acts of necrophilia;

III. There is a history or data of any type of violence in the family, work or school environment of the subject active against the victim;

IV. There is a sentimental, affective, or trusting relationship between the victim and the perpetrator

V. There are data that establish that there have been threats related to the criminal act, harassment or injuries of the person active against the victim;

VI. The victim has been held incommunicado, regardless of the time prior to the deprivation of life.鈥

GBV in El Salvador

The nation of El Salvador is one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a woman, have reported experiencing violence in their lifetimes while a third of women reported experiencing violence in the last 12 months. In 2018, for every 100,000 women, were victims of femicide which is nearly 10 times the global average and the highest feminicide rate in Latin America. In 2019, data collected by Gender Statistics Observatory of the General Directorate of Statistics and Censuses (DIGESTYC) found that between January and June, of violence against women were reported each day. In addition to the 230 registered femicides from 2019, were reported missing.

Much like in Mexico, the impunity for these crimes is staggering: more than are never taken to court and a mere 7 percent of cases lead to a conviction. Accessing the criminal justice system is a significant barrier for most women, according to a national survey of violence against women. Of the women surveyed, that they would not be believed if they reported violence to the police, 11.9 percent had been threatened for reporting and an additional 9 percent did not know where to go for help These fears are not unfounded: the Organization of Salvadoran Women for Peace (ORMUSA) found that in of violence against women that were reported, the perpetrators were judges, prosecutors, lawyers, and police officers in their communities.

There is evidence that the rule of law in El Salvador continues to weaken; according to the World Governance Indicators, El Salvador scored in the of all countries in rule of law, down from the 30th percentile ten years ago. The most significant factor in that decline is the gang violence that that dominates the Salvadoran landscape and is a driver for the alarming levels of violence against women and impunity. According to Ana Graciela Sagastume, the chief prosecutor on femicide of the Women鈥檚 Coordination Unit, of victims are often afraid to come forward for fear of reprisal from gangs and violence against women is often perpetrated because they reject advances or try to break up with a gang member.

In 2012, El Salvador adopted the sweeping 鈥.鈥 Article 45 of this law specifically addresses the crime of feminicide which is defined as the death of a woman by means of hate or contempt under the following circumstances:

鈥渁) The death was preceded by an incident of violence committed by the perpetrator against the woman, whether or not the act has been reported by the victim.

(b) That the perpetrator has taken advantage of any condition of risk or vulnerability physical or psychological condition in which the female victim was found.

(c) The author took advantage of the superiority generated by the relationship gender-based power inequalities.

(d) Prior to the woman's death, the author committed any conduct qualified as a crime against sexual freedom.

e) Death preceded by mutilation.鈥

GBV in Brazil

Approximately every because she is a woman in Brazil. Last year Brazil set a record high of 1,341 femicides, over the previous year. To give a sense of the truly breathtaking scope of the problem, in 2018, Latin America and the Caribbean recorded 3,287 femicides鈥. Feminicides have continued to rise despite Brazil鈥檚 adoption of legislation that criminalizes feminicide. Since the law went into force in 2015,

Brazil first criminalized violence against women in 2006 with the sweeping (Lei N潞 11.340), named after the human rights activist and biopharmacist who fought for the law after she was nearly murdered by her husband and left paralyzed. The law addresses domestic violence by criminalizing it, establishing special courts, and requiring the authorities to create 24-hour shelters for victims. The law provides protection to the victim, empowering judges to put in place temporary restraining orders. It was a seismic shift for a country that had failed to protect Maria da Penha and countless women like her. However, the 2006 law was not enough to tackle the growing problem of feminicide and in 2015, Brazil adopted Lei No. 13,104 or the which explicitly criminalized feminicide under the following conditions:

鈥淰I - against women for reasons of the female condition.

搂 2o-A There are reasons for female condition when the crime involves:

I - domestic and family violence;

II - disregard or discrimination against women鈥

Like Maria da Penha, the majority of femicide victims in Brazil knew their attacker. An analysis by F贸rum Brasileiro de Seguran莽a P煤blica researchers found that were perpetrated by an intimate partner and that 65.6 percent occurred in the home. In a study published by the Minist茅rio P煤blico in the State of S茫o Paulo, analyzing data captured from March 2016-March 2017, or attempt to end a relationship, and 30 percent because of jealousy or machismo.

Brazil is a large country with an estimated 212 million inhabitants and one of the most diverse populations in the world. Which then begs the question, who are the victims of feminicide? In 2019, were of Afro-Brazilian descent even though they make up roughly half the population. However we can assume this number is larger because these data do not include the , which boasts the largest Afro-Brazilian population in the country. Brazil suffers from a long history of racism rooted in colonialism and the Trans-Atlantic Slave trade whose legacy shapes modern Brazilian society; are Afro-Brazilian. Violence against Afro-Brazilian women is well documented, the homicide rates for Afro-Brazilian women (out of 26 and the Federal District) from 2006-2016 and in 12 of those states the increase was 50 percent or higher during that period.

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Learn more about the project

In 2020, women鈥檚 rights and gender equality are taking center stage. In March, the 乐鱼 体育 launched a new initiative examining gender-based violence in Latin America with a focus on its most extreme form, femicide. Watch the video to learn more.