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This article reviews major findings from the authors' research on women killed by their intimate partners in Ontario. Between 1974 and 1994, killings by intimate partners accounted for between 63% and 76% of all women killed in Ontario. The authors document trends in intimate femicide, characteristics of victims and offenders, circumstances of the killings, and criminal justice responses to offenders. They also discuss the gender-specific nature of intimate femicides and identify ways in which intimate partner killings by males and females are distinctly different.
Cet article recense les resultats principaux d'une recherche effectuee par les auteures sur les femmes tuees par leurs partenaires intimes en Ontario. Entre 1974 et 1994, les meurtres par partenaire intimes constituaient entre 63 et 76 pour cent de toutes les femmes tuees en Ontario. Les auteures documentent les tendances reliees aux femicides intimes, les caracteristiques des victimes et des agresseurs, les circonstances entourant les meurtres, et la reaction du systeme judiciaire aux agresseurs. Elles discutent egalement de la nature genree des femicides intimes et identifient les facons dont les meurtres par partenaires intimes different selon le sexe de l'agresseur.
In March 1988, a young mother of two was killed by her estranged husband in a northern Ontario town. The killer had been visiting his wife who was staying in a shelter for abused women. Convinced that she was not going to return to him, he shot her twice at close range. Later that year, in a small town outside of Edmonton, a woman was shot dead in her home by her estranged husband who then shot and killed himself. Miraculously, the woman's three-year old girl, whom she was holding in her arms when she was shot, was not wounded. These women were two of the 202 female victims of homicide in Canada in 1988. They shared with 68 other female victims a marital relationship with their killers. These two women also shared the experience of having been clients and friends of women who worked in shelters for abused women in Ontario.
In response to these and other killings of women they had worked with, eight women met in January 1989 to share their experiences and provide each other emotional support. Within a few months the group had named itself the...