Twemlow, JoyJoyTwemlowTurner, CatherineCatherineTurnerSwaine, AislingAislingSwaine2023-03-302023-03-302022 the A2022-10-06Australian Feminist Law Journalhttp://hdl.handle.net/10197/24265This article adopts a feminist phenomenological method to flesh out the way in which gendered norms position the experience of anticipating violence. While women’s everyday lives are frequently polluted with an atmosphere laden with potential threats, the law struggles to adequately grasp this experience of anticipating violence. We argue that the dominant legal understanding of violence is incapable of grasping the experience of anticipating violence because the temporal focus of violence is constrained by the law’s focus on violence as an ‘event’ to which it responds. Drawing on interviews with women in positions of leadership in Northern Ireland we provide a description of this gendered experience of anticipating violence. In these cases, women occupy a temporally and spatially stretched out space of being-in-anticipation that not only creates an atmosphere of ambiguity but restricts the space for women to exercise control over their own lives. Arguably the way that anticipation restricts women’s ways of engaging with the world create affective conditions that parallel those of the violence they seek to avoid. We conclude by proposing that the ambiguity that characterises anticipation leaves space for a compassionate response through intersubjective recognition.enThis is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Australian Feminist Law Journal on 25 November 2022, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13200968.2022.2138185Phenomenology of violenceAnticipation of violenceFeminist phenomenologyGendered violenceWomen in leadershipMoving in a State of Fear: Ambiguity, Gendered Temporality, and the Phenomenology of Anticipating ViolenceJournal Article4818711110.1080/13200968.2022.21381852022-09-07https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/