Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’

Research output: Other contributionBlog postCommunication

Standard

Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’. / Di Nucci, Ezio.

BMJ Publishing Group. 2024.

Research output: Other contributionBlog postCommunication

Harvard

Di Nucci, E 2024, Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’. BMJ Publishing Group.

APA

Di Nucci, E. (2024). Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’. BMJ Publishing Group.

Vancouver

Di Nucci E. Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’. 2024.

Author

Di Nucci, Ezio. / Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’. 2024. BMJ Publishing Group.

Bibtex

@misc{27aab16c82c84420a93ebdaeb14e6438,
title = "Defending the use of the term {\textquoteleft}obstetric violence{\textquoteright}",
abstract = "Here I defend {\textquoteright}obstetric violence{\textquoteright}: not the practice, but its name – and more generally the idea that some obstetric practices deserve to be called acts of violence, contrary to what has recently been argued. This question is relevant beyond sexual and reproductive health: what is at stake is the very idea of assigning the term “violence” beyond traditional violent practices such as, for example, rape, homicide, assault and terrorism...",
author = "{Di Nucci}, Ezio",
note = "BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health Blog, 2.6.2024",
year = "2024",
language = "English",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
address = "United Kingdom",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Defending the use of the term ‘obstetric violence’

AU - Di Nucci, Ezio

N1 - BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health Blog, 2.6.2024

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Here I defend ’obstetric violence’: not the practice, but its name – and more generally the idea that some obstetric practices deserve to be called acts of violence, contrary to what has recently been argued. This question is relevant beyond sexual and reproductive health: what is at stake is the very idea of assigning the term “violence” beyond traditional violent practices such as, for example, rape, homicide, assault and terrorism...

AB - Here I defend ’obstetric violence’: not the practice, but its name – and more generally the idea that some obstetric practices deserve to be called acts of violence, contrary to what has recently been argued. This question is relevant beyond sexual and reproductive health: what is at stake is the very idea of assigning the term “violence” beyond traditional violent practices such as, for example, rape, homicide, assault and terrorism...

UR - https://blogs.bmj.com/bmjsrh/2024/06/02/defending-the-use-of-the-term-obstetric-violence/

M3 - Blog post

PB - BMJ Publishing Group

ER -

ID: 393767894