Professor Eisenbruch |
The US$99,500
award—Development Marketplace 2018: Innovations in
Addressing Gender Based Violence, awarded by the World Bank Group and the
Sexual Violence Research Initiative—will support Professor Eisenbruch’s ongoing research that explores
cultural forces underpinning gender-based violence (GBV) and interventions that
could contribute to prevention.
“The award will enable the research team
to test how women, men, girls and boys use their local cultural references to
understand GBV that they may have experienced or witnessed,” Professor
Eisenbruch said.
“Through collaboration with a Buddhist network, we will
examine initiatives developed by monks to help prevent GBV and mitigate its
effects.”
“We will also document why perpetrators and survivors sought
help from monks and female devotees, and how it changed attitudes towards women
and girls.”
Professor Eisenbruch said that throughout his career as a psychiatrist
and medical anthropologist he has been committed to relief of suffering of his
patients and, beyond that, strives for relief of communities facing human
suffering globally.
“Gender based
violence is one of the worst scourges on the planet,” he said.
“This award
will help in the quest to transfer research into policy that makes a
difference.”
Professor
Eisenbruch acknowledges his collaborators Theary Chan from the Reproductive and
Child Health Alliance (RACHA) in Cambodia and Willem van de Put from the
Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) in Antwerp.
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