
Beginnen Sie mit generischen Gruppen, da ich weiß, dass Einzelpersonen unterschiedlich sind. Was denkst du, die Gründe für hohe Gewalt gegen Frauen in Finnland? Im Allgemeinen scheinen finnische Männer weich und nett zu mir zu sein. Ich sehe einige aggressive Männer, aber in meinen Augen haben finnische Frauen im Gegensatz zu den unterwürfigen Kulturen wie in Asien usw. starke Eigenschaften.
Was können also die Gründe für die hohen Zahlen sein?
https://www.helsinkitimes.fi/176-information/study/27816-finland-reports-highest-rate-of-gender-based-violence-in-eu-new-data-shows.html
Von Regular-Love7686
16 Kommentare
They’re already written in the article.
Liberal paradox.
More reporting and understanding what could Be reported as violence. Also study warns that this kind of deduction should not be made.
Bit yeah, Finland has violence. Finnish women are also violent.
Vast majority of this is domestic violence. Primary reason is probably above average cases of alcoholism. Also Finland still has quite traditional gender roles, if not nearly at the level of Asia.
Nordic paradox mentioned in the article has to have a pretty big part in it.
My ex is Finnish. I went through 7 horrible years. Most of it was sexual and emotional abuse. I did not get asked if I want to have kids. And in the end, he took them away from me with lying to social workers that I would kill them. Which is obviously not true. Now the kids live with his parents, who tell the kids all kind of bullshit. Since I am a foreigner and a woman, I feel like I am in the hierachy very much down. But as a Finnish guy, you are very high up and can do basically whatever you want. Also to mentioned, that the social worker in our case, was a friend of his mother. That alone is usually illegal. When I told her, „Do I look like a mass murder or something? So if I tell you that he would run outside now and screams, would you believe me then too? Because it’s the same right? Would be believing a lie“ and she said „No, he would never do things like that“. No, instead he threw plates at home, pushed our own daughter from the couch. When it was his turn to look after the kids, he brought them to friends and go somewhere else, and so on. Horrible. Never again. One relationship like this was enough for me. This guy destroyed not only my life, they also destroyed the life of our children. I got PTSD from it, and my daughter started to develop tics after they got taken away. I still miss my kids a lot, I can see them one weekend in a month, but usually my parents in law make it difficult. My older one asks so many times when she can come back to me and I can’t do anything. My younger one doesn’t even see me as mom, she doesn’t speak my language, my older one does though. The Finnish family got what they wanted and still they want to take more from me of what I have heard from suomi.fi. /dvv
Probably explained by the difference in reporting.
Alcoholism, and the irritating refusal to face emotional or interpersonal issues until they become intolerable. That tends to create violence from both sides, but most often from men.
Even the report says that the results aren’t really comparable between countries. Still almost all newspapers compare them. This is just bs ragebaiting and getting viewers.
[deleted]
– Definition of violence used (is catcalling sexual violence? Maybe in some countries, and not in others)
– Good police that takes these serious means higher confidence with reporting and lower unreported cases
– High alcohol abuse is likely to increase violence overall
– High immigration of men from cultures that treat violence against woman as more normal
Shady ass website.
Find your news elsewhere.
I keep getting baffled by those numbers for two reasons. First of all, it lumps together both the act and *threat* of physical and sexual violence, It’s a bit broad for rape to get lumped together with s threat of violence, one being a very narrow definition, and the other very broad.
Second, the number is still very high, even if we exclude threats. It’s high for women obviously, but also surprisingly high for nen as well. Nearly a fifth of men say they’ve been subject to abuse from their partners. Those numbers don’t just correlate my experience of people, and that’s the weirdest part. Not saying my experience is right and statistics are wrong, but there’s such a chasm between.
Yes, I am a man, and no I wouldn’t know. But considering the social price you pay for assaulting a woman, the percentages are astonishingly high.
!remove
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/7870049/20464303/KS-01-24-013-EN-N.pdf/052adbe2-40bd-9472-87c0-ed14c7106bfa?version=1.0&t=1732193841491:
> Contributing factors to the differences between countries can include the extent to which people perceive certain acts as ‘wrong’ and harmful, and people’s awareness and recognition (including in legislation) of different types of violence as criminal offences. For example, rape in marriage has been recognised in law and criminalised at different times in different countries. Public and media debates related to specific incidents of violence against women can also shape people’s
views (15).
> …In addition, the Nordic paradox’ (16) reveals a pattern whereby Member States that score highly on gender
equality also tend to show higher levels of gender-based violence in surveys. This can occur for
the reasons outlined above, among others (17).
> **In view of these factors, comparisons of the prevalence of violence against women between countries should be carried out cautiously.** The results should not be interpreted as providing the complete picture of women’s experiences of violence in a country, as more nuanced analysis of the correlates of violence and contextual factors needs to be taken into account. More detailed analysis of the factors influencing the prevalence of violence will be included in the main results report of the survey, which will be published in 2025.
Add here your reasonable disclaimer like violence is Bad okay?
Direct quote from the article you linked:
„The survey cautioned against direct comparisons between countries due to variations in reporting behaviour, social awareness, and survey methodology. In Finland, data collection was conducted online via self-completion, which researchers say may lead to greater disclosure of sensitive experiences.
The results also reflect what researchers describe as the “Nordic paradox,” where countries with high levels of gender equality simultaneously report high levels of gender-based violence. Explanations include greater public awareness, stronger protections for victims, and more willingness to disclose abuse.“
Helsinki Times isn’t trustworthy media. They are obsessed with anti-Finnish propaganda.