Pharmacophore an International Research Journal
Pharmacophore
Submit Manuscript
Open Access | Published: 2017 - Issue 0 supplementary

The Role of Social Emergency in Removing Labels from Victimized Runaway Women and Normal Runaway Women (Case Study: Tehran’s Shahid Navvab Safavi Crisis Intervention Center) Download PDF


Abbas Shiri1, Samira Sadat Mirshafi’eiyan2*
Abstract

The phenomenon of runaway women has become an essential problem in the today’s societies. According to the development of urbanization and the changes and evolutions that have occurred in various social aspects, the vulnerability among the subordinate regions has expanded more. Nowadays, according to the conditions of the female victims, it is required to devote an organization to their support in the society and it is through coherent planning in line with prevention and control of the social harms and the reduction of the crimes against the women that serious steps can be taken parallel to their support. The current study is a survey research that adopts both qualitative and quantitative approaches to analyze the researcher-constructed questions regarding 62 runaway women, 14 to 35 years old and residing in subordinate districts in the city of Tehran. The study subjects have been selected during a period of five continuous months of sampling in a social emergency center. The majority of the runaway women were found grown up in broken and disorderly families. The women’s escape is suggestive of an array of psychological and social interfamily conflicts. All these women have sought refuge in Welfare Organization due to the conditions governing their lives. Inter alia these women, there were those who had been victimized and some others who were mostly normal women, escaped their residence due to the lack of a relative degree of freedom and security. In return, the social emergency center has succeeded in removing the label of being an absconder from these women to a great extent.
QR code:

Short Link:
Quick Access

Associations

Pharmacophore
ISSN: 2229-5402

Copyright © 2025 Pharmacophore. Authors retain copyright of their article if they are accepted for publication.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.