Research centre for domestic and gender-based violence (ReCeGe)

Project facts

Project promoter:
Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences(CZ)
Project Number:
CZ-HUMANRIGHTS-0033
Status:
Completed
Donor Project Partners:
Kilden Kjonnsforskning.no(NO)
Other Project Partners
Faculty of Humanities Charles University(CZ)

Description

The project Research centre for domestic and gender-based violence (ReCeGe) will start in January 2022 and end at the end of December 2023. Its core focus is on the establishment of a Research centre for domestic and gender-based violence. Its research output will contribute to improving the protection and enforcement of human rights in the Czech Republic (CZ), namely the right to protection of life and the right to a life free from (domestic and gender-based) violence. For the establishment of ReCeGe, it is crucial to acquire representative data mapping the adult CZ populationĀ“s experience with domestic and gender-based violence. The first part of the project is therefore taken up by conducting a nationwide survey to collect such data. This data will then be interpreted in the light of up-to-date internationally competitive research, which addresses the gendered basis of such violence. The thereby accumulated knowledge base will then be used by the project team to start a discussion with experts from key institutions designated to assist survivors (esp. child services, the police, intervention centres, and civil society organisations) across the CZ but also to address the general public. These discussions will involve survivors introducing their perspective into institutional response to this type of violence and its prevention. We will present topical high-quality international research outcomes regarding domestic and gender-based violence to the expert public in the framework of round tables designed to stimulate networking. At the end of the project, an international conference will be held together with Kilden, the Norwegian project partner. A long-term objective of the project is to establish good research practice that will help to overcome often fundamentally flawed partial studies that are irrelevantly generalised. The project will thus improve general as well as expert public knowledge about violence, its causes, implications and prevention. 

Summary of project results

The project improved human rights protection in the Czech Republic, specifically the right to life and freedom from domestic and gender-based violence. This was achieved by a) creating a website with a database of expert texts and reports; b) conducting a representative survey of adults; c) establishing inter-ministerial cooperation for assessing and recording femicides; d) conducting impactful qualitative research among those who experienced domestic violence as children and adolescents.

The project dealt with 5 activities (A) and project publicity (A4) and project management (A3). A1: Quantitative research aimed at collecting information on the prevalence of violence in interpersonal relationships among the adult population of Czechia, which was lacking and necessary for setting agendas and further research on the topic of domestic and gender-based violence. A2: Establishment of the ReCeGe centre, a sustainable structure in the form of the website recege.soc.cas.cz, which can be built upon for further research. A5: Trip to the Norwegian partner Kilden, in order to obtain up-to-date information for the establishment of the centre; A6: Round tables, which led to the establishment of a longer-term cooperation in the field of femicide in the Czech context; A7: International conference, at which we presented the main outputs of the project (research reports, methodologies, a database of expert texts on the centre''s website, etc.) and to which the Czech media responded.

The main outputs of the project are a website at soc.cas.cz with a database of expert texts on domestic and gender-based violence, a research report from the survey Feeling Safe and Quality of Life, a qualitative research report on Children and Violence in Close Relationships, two expert articles, two guidelines and the establishment of interdisciplinary cooperation. Benefits include interdisciplinary collaboration, impact on public debate and the involvement of survivors in the project.

Information on the projects funded by the EEA and Norway Grants is provided by the Programme and Fund Operators in the Beneficiary States, who are responsible for the completeness and accuracy of this information.