Research knowledge base for GBV questions, methods, and service pathways
This is now a research knowledge base rather than a simple FAQ. Search across the published corpus, filter by research lens, and move directly into the source material behind each answer.
Published entries
210
Curated answers grounded in public South African GBV, justice, and support sources.
Visible now
3
Entries matching your current search, lens, and source filters.
Source sets
49
Each answer stays tied to a public source so researchers can verify context.
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The knowledge base explains the concepts. The municipality pages, rankings, and baseline context show how to apply them in the research workflow.
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Research lenses
Filter the knowledge base the way researchers work
Move between methods, service pathways, risk factors, legal process, survivor support, and data interpretation without losing source traceability.
Methods
Study design, methodology, definitions, and how the evidence was assembled.
Service pathways
How people move through hospitals, police, shelters, courts, and referral systems.
Risk factors
Drivers of violence, vulnerability, exposure, and intersectional risk patterns.
Legal process
Rights, reporting, police procedure, court process, and legal protections.
Survivor support
Healing, counselling, trauma-informed support, and practical care for survivors.
Data interpretation
Limits, caveats, bias, and guidance for reading the evidence responsibly.
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Search across questions, answers, and source titles, then narrow the set by knowledge lens or source family.
Research lens
Risk factors
3 entriesDrivers of violence, vulnerability, exposure, and intersectional risk patterns.
Rape Crisis uses the F.O.U.R. framework to describe stalking patterns as Fixed, Obsessive, Unwanted, and Repetitive. The framework helps show that stalking is usually not one isolated interaction, but a pattern of escalating entitlement, intrusion, and control.
Rape Crisis says stalking is often misread as affection or someone who simply cares too much, but it is actually about power, entitlement, and control. When contact is unwanted and repeated, it is a violation of boundaries rather than a sign of love.
Rape Crisis explains that stalking can function as grooming, intimidation, retaliation, or ongoing coercion in the context of sexual violence. It reinforces the message that a survivor's boundaries do not matter and can create a climate where silence feels safer than resistance.