Male-Centred Norms and Intimate Partner Femicides: A Case Study in German Homicide Law by David Linkerhaegner

Authors

  • David Linkerhaegner The University of Edinburgh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2218/ccj.v5.10408

Keywords:

Criminal Law, femicide, feminist criminology, General Strain Theory

Abstract

This paper examines male-centred norms and femicide from a feminist criminology perspective, conducting a case study of the German criminal law's response to intimate partner femicide. Focusing on the legal framework of homicide in the German Criminal Code (StGB), it critiques the doctrinal understanding of the statutory wording ‘despicable reasons’ in the context of femicide as perpetuating gendered biases rooted in male-centred norms. By analysing case law and feminist criminological scholarship, the paper highlights how the case law’s concept of ‘ordinary psychological motives’ fails to adequately address gendered violence. It calls for a different perception of ‘the ordinary’ to better reflect the gendered dynamics of intimate partner femicide on a case-by-case approach.

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Author Biography

  • David Linkerhaegner, The University of Edinburgh

    David Linkerhägner is currently pursuing an LLM in Law at the University of Edinburgh as a recipient of a postgraduate scholarship from the German Scholarship Foundation. After his first state-examination in law in Germany, he is now focusing on theoretical and critical legal thought across various areas of the law.

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Published

08-Dec-2025

Issue

Section

Articles