8,516 results
Search Results
2. "Nimble Sociality and Belonging": an Ethnography of Migrants' Responses to Bans on Associational Life During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Bhanye, Johannes
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,INSTANT messaging ,IMMIGRANTS ,ETHNOLOGY ,RITES & ceremonies ,COMMUNITY involvement ,DOMESTIC violence ,SEX discrimination - Abstract
Within the past few years, pandemics like HIV/AIDS, influenza, and SARS-CoV-2 have become common worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic, which broke out recently, profoundly impacted the world. As part of containing this pandemic, lockdowns which put a moratorium on human mobility and associational life became a dominant measure. Yet these mobilities and associational life are the lifeblood of migrants and diaspora belonging. This paper examines the impacts of bans on associational life on migrants and, further, what migrants did to continue living in the absence of these associations during the COVID-19 pandemic. The paper is based on a case study of Lydiate informal settlement in Zimbabwe, where Malawian migrants have established an ethnic enclave to shield themselves from the precarity and injustices of foreign lands. Through convivial and digital ethnographic fieldwork, the paper revealed that bans on associational life disrupted community engagements and binding religious associational life, increased targeted violence and "othering," and perpetuated stigma and discrimination and loss of ties with family and fictive kin. However, migrants restructured their associational life by adopting agile and new forms of belonging to get by, including relocating religious shrines to more secretive places or conducting religious ceremonies in the dark, drinking beer within the perimeter of the settlement, using of WhatsApp and instant messaging and WhatsApp groups for important community updates, and collective resistance. I termed these strategies "nimble forms of sociality and belonging," meaning there are lithe mechanisms that migrants employ to further their sociality even when they are restricted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Domestic violence against women has increased during the COVID‐19 pandemic: A perspective paper about the need for change to current and future practice.
- Author
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Usher, Kim, Jackson, Debra, Fatema, Syadani Riyad, and Jones, Rikki
- Subjects
MENTAL illness risk factors ,PSYCHIATRIC nursing ,CULTURE ,NURSING ,MINORITIES ,DOMESTIC violence ,VIOLENCE ,GENDER ,RISK assessment ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,PSYCHIATRIC nurses ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,EVIDENCE-based nursing - Abstract
The COVID‐19 outbreak led to widespread disruption and stress to people's lives. Concern about the escalation of domestic violence (DV) rates and related mental health issues soon emerged following the implementation of strategies aimed at curbing the spread of the virus. This perspective paper presents an overview of the issues, argues for greater recognition of the link between DV against women and serious emotional distress, and the need for greater awareness and knowledge about DV among mental health professionals. While we acknowledge that men also experience DV, their rates are much lower than for women and in this paper our focus is on women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Exploring the prevalence of childhood adversity among university students in the United Kingdom: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Hamilton, Jackie, Welham, Alice, Morgan, Gareth, and Jones, Christopher
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,PHYSICAL abuse ,DOMESTIC violence ,SEX crimes - Abstract
Objectives: The focus of this review was to systematically review and meta-analyse the prevalence of ACEs among university students in the UK. Method: The systematic searching of six electronic databases (conducted February 2024) identified ten relevant articles (peer-reviewed articles of a quantitative nature that included ACE prevalence). PROSPERO reference: CRD42022364799. Results: Pooled prevalence for number of ACEs endured was 55.4% (95% CI: 32.4% - 78.4%; I
2 > 99.5%) for one or more, and 31.6% (7.5% - 55.6%; I2 > 99.5%) for three or more. Pooled prevalence was: 15.9% (7.0% - 24.7%; I2 > 94.5%) for physical abuse; 27.0% (18.1% - 35.9%; I2 > 94.5%) for emotional abuse; 12.1% (5.2% - 19.0%; I2 > 94.5%) for sexual abuse; 8.4% (1.7% - 15.1%; I2 > 95.4%) for physical neglect, and 30.0% (21.5% - 38.5%; I2 > 95.4%) for emotional neglect. Pooled prevalence for household dysfunction categories were: 34.4% (22.8% - 46.0%) for parental separation; 18.4% (10.1% - 26.8%) for domestic violence; 35.2% (23.6% - 46.8%) for mental health difficulties; 21.4% (12.9% - 29.9%) for substance use; and 5.7% (2.3% - 9.1%) for incarceration (I2 > 88.8% for all household dysfunction items). Significant heterogeneity was observed between studies for most categories of adversity, and it was not possible to explain/reduce this variance by removing small numbers of influential/discrepant studies. Further analyses suggested potential influences of measurement tool used, country of data collection, and age and sex of participants. Conclusion: Results demonstrate considerable, largely unaccounted-for, heterogeneity in estimates of the prevalence of ACEs, impeding confidence in any summary statistics. Conclusions must be tentative due to analyses being underpowered given small numbers of papers, as well as potential confounds, meaning results may not be truly representative. However, results do suggest high prevalence rates which warrant further investigation, with appropriate support offered to students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. WOMEN AS VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN NORTH MACEDONIA IN THE TIME FRAME 2017 – 2023.
- Author
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GJAKOVA, Era
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,VICTIMS of domestic violence ,WOMEN household employees ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations - Abstract
Domestic violence is one of the most disturbing phenomena in our society, due to the very fact that this form of crime is committed by people whom we consider close, love, but above all, with whom we feel safe. Often when we talk about victims of domestic violence, we refer to women. But is this because women have historically been considered weaker or is this supported by statistics? In this research paper, we will deal with how many cases of violence have been reported, the number of victims and perpetrators, and above all we will answer the question: Is there a discrepancy between men and women as perpetrators and as victims in domestic violence. This paper will analyze domestic violence in the entire territory of the Republic of North Macedonia, in a period of seven years, respectively for the period 2017 - 2023. Statistics show that regardless of various campaigns, non-stop work of nongovernmental organizations and activists, and sanctions, domestic violence has not decreased in a period of seven years. That’s why it is important that when we deal with domestic violence, we should first be clear about the proportion between the two sexes, so that the measures taken for prevention but also for helping victims of domestic violence are adapted as much as possible to the individuals to whom they are dedicated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
6. Weekly Policy Papers.
- Subjects
CHILD support ,DOMESTIC violence ,YOUNG adults - Abstract
This article provides information on various policy papers published by the UK government, including the government's response to the independent review of the Child Maintenance Service and the response to domestic abuse; papers from the parliamentary libraries, such as the House of Lords Library and the House of Commons Library. The topics covered in this report include child maintenance, young people, water safety education, and apprenticeships in England.
- Published
- 2023
7. Researching With Lived Experience: A Shared Critical Reflection Between Co-Researchers.
- Author
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Dembele, Lula, Nathan, Sally, Carter, Allison, Costello, Jane, Hodgins, Michael, Singh, Rose, Martin, Bianca, and Cullen, Patricia
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CRITICAL thinking ,DRUG addiction ,DOMESTIC violence ,SEXUAL assault ,CAPACITY building ,STRENGTH training - Abstract
This paper draws together critical learnings from diverse qualitative health research projects in Australia that sought to shift power and focus on the strengths and expertise of people with lived experience who are involved as co-researchers. These projects have included exploring and challenging identities, understanding experiences in treatment programs, critiquing and designing/re-designing services, and sharing experiences with the wider community in novel and innovative ways. Lived experiences included alcohol and other drug dependency, mental health, domestic, family or sexual violence, and living with HIV. This paper provides important learnings and actions about partnering with co-researchers with lived experience. In this paper we draw on a process of reflective discussions that occurred over six months with fortnightly online meetings between co-researchers, including co-authors with lived experience external to academia and university-based researchers, some of whom also have lived-experience that intersects with their research. From this, we distilled key learnings across seven themes: (1) the ethics of ethics, which highlights a need for constant reflection on the ethical issues in co-research; (2) recruiting co-researchers, which focuses on ensuring and integrating a diversity of voices; (3) creating safety for all, which must be a priority of engagement and support self-determination; (4) supporting different ways of partnering, which emphasises the need for diverse roles and ways to contribute on research teams; (5) capacity building and training, which requires ongoing evaluation of needs and tailored responses; (6) positioning, which highlights the need to transition from the idea of vulnerability to a strengths-based perspective of lived experience; and (7) power plays, reflecting the need to disrupt the dynamics and established hierarchies of privileging certain forms of knowledge and expertise. The paper includes recommendations for action against these seven themes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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8. The role of women's empowerment on child nutrition in India: a longitudinal analysis.
- Author
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Chatterjee, Poulami and Dubey, Amaresh
- Subjects
WOMEN'S empowerment ,CHILD nutrition ,NUTRITION ,MALNUTRITION in children ,INFANT nutrition ,WEIGHT in infancy ,BIRTH weight ,DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
Child malnutrition remains a pervasive problem in India though there are significant improvements in several health indicators with country's consistent economic growth. Along with other factors, maternal autonomy is considered to be critical in influencing health outcome of a child. This paper attempts to examine the determinants of nutritional measures of children under age five with the focus to the role of mother's autonomy in India. There are studies which link characteristics of mother, like education, age, with nutrition of her children. But maternal autonomy is a complex subject as this variable is not tangible. Women's autonomy in daily life is more likely to result in their better healthcare which in turn influences children's birth weight and infant nutrition. We used nationally representative India Human Development Survey 2004–05 (IHDS- 1) and 2011–12 (IHDS 2) data for the analysis. This paper studies the association between maternal autonomy and childhood stunting, the indicator of chronic malnutrition, and the risk of having a stunted child. We have also used the panel data using both waves of IHDS and used mothers fixed effect model to evaluate the impact of maternal autonomy. The autonomy index is created using four dimensions-women's decision making, freedom of movement, financial autonomy and attitude toward domestic violence. The two dimensions of autonomy—physical autonomy, financial autonomy—remain significant determinants for childhood stunting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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9. Compromise on Parenting and Family Violence? Reforms to Canada's Divorce Act.
- Author
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Leckey, Robert
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,LAW reform ,DOMESTIC relations ,DIVORCE law - Abstract
This paper contributes to international feminist debates on shared parenting and family violence via reforms to Canada's Divorce Act, in force since 2021. Looking backwards, it reviews parliamentary debates and early judicial discussions. The documentary review reads the reforms as an unstable compromise between calls from feminist voices and experts on family violence and from groups representing fathers. Family violence is now defined broadly and declared relevant to children's welfare. But language in the statute may undermine its seriousness. Exposing the tensions underlying these reforms is useful for Canadian participants in family justice and for scholars, practitioners, and policymakers elsewhere, exemplifying the promise and perils of reform in this area. Looking ahead, the paper offers recommendations to higher courts. Appellate judges should read rules on contact with both parents and parental cooperation in the light of the new recognition of family violence, taking the latter as an overarching objective of the statute. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. Editorial: Economic evaluation in evidence-based criminal justice contexts.
- Author
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Giles, Susan, Bandyopadhyay, Siddhartha, Shalev, Karen, and Manning, Matthew
- Subjects
BEHAVIORAL sciences ,CRIMINAL justice system ,COST benefit analysis ,ECONOMIC models ,CHILD sexual abuse ,DOMESTIC violence ,CRIMINAL psychology - Abstract
This document is an editorial published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology. The editorial discusses the importance of economic evaluation in evidence-based criminal justice contexts. It highlights four research papers that demonstrate innovative economic practices in estimating treatment effects, directing resources to high-risk individuals, and prioritizing offenses. The papers emphasize the need for robust economic analysis to inform decision-making and resource allocation in criminal justice agencies. The editorial concludes by emphasizing the potential benefits of economic evaluation in improving the effectiveness and efficiency of interventions in the criminal justice system. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Editorial.
- Author
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Penhale, Bridget
- Subjects
SAFETY ,SERIAL publications ,ABUSE of older people ,SOCIAL case work ,DOMESTIC violence - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Culture, Religion and Domestic Violence: Reflections on Working with Fiji and Tuvalu Communities.
- Author
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Amin, Sara N., Momoyalewa, Selina, and Peniamina, Sepola Taata
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,GENDER-based violence ,PATRIARCHY ,RACE ,RELIGIONS ,CULTURE - Abstract
While domestic violence (DV) has been understood as a form of gendered violence linked to patriarchal power, postcolonial and indigenous feminist criminologies have underscored that DV needs to be understood also in relation to the interactions and entanglements between colonialism, class, race, nation, gender and religion. Moreover, such interventions require questioning Western and secular assumptions and reductions of culture, tradition and nonmodern (read 'non-Western') epistemologies and faith as reserves of mainly patriarchal power. This paper reflects within three practitioner spaces on efforts against DV in Fiji and Tuvalu and how these critiques and interventions are mobilised in practice and with community interactions. We draw on the varied experiences of the three of us (educator, counsellor and police officer) to explore how we are embedded in various forms of translation and bordercrossing work, especially in relation to assumptions, practices and knowledge linked to culture, religion and rights in relation to DV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Doing rural community-based action research (CBAR): Community perceptions and methodological impacts.
- Author
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Magnus, Amy M. and Rai, Kristen
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEETINGS ,JOB security ,INTERVIEWING ,ETHNOLOGY research ,FOOD security ,COMMUNITIES ,ACTION research ,RURAL population ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,DOMESTIC violence ,GROUNDED theory - Abstract
Researchers conducting community-based action research (CBAR) become immersed in their field site, developing close relationships and enabling members of the community to pursue social action. We contribute a nuanced analysis of the impact of CBAR on those who participate in the method, particularly participants who live rurally. Situating this work in the history and prior methodological examinations of CBAR, we demonstrate the critical relationship between this research approach and the rural landscape. Our findings speak to two research questions: how do participatory- and otherwise community-based, action-oriented research methods impact those who participate in research? And, how do researchers and research participants make sense of this impact? Using interview, observation, and photographic data, our analysis indicates that community members' perceptions of CBAR exist on a spectrum situated around two key, but fluid, positions: the 'trusted outsider' and the 'affective collaborator.' Our findings provide researchers with a stronger methodological foundation to approach community-based, action-oriented research with an ethic of care. Further, our findings provide methodologists with a better understanding of the multi-directional impact of doing CBAR and the ways we can use this information to do CBAR ethically and effectively. In this way, our paper contributes to a growing body of scholarship regarding the practice and impact of collaborative, community-based research approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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14. Domestic Violence against Women in India: Does Empowerment Matter?
- Author
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Paul, Tanusree and Karmakar, Suranjana
- Subjects
INDIAN women (Asians) ,MARITAL violence ,CELL phones ,WOMEN'S empowerment ,HEALTH surveys ,SELF-efficacy ,DOMESTIC violence ,VIOLENCE against women - Abstract
Past research on domestic violence in India recurrently highlight women's economic empowerment as a major deterrent to domestic violence. That said, this paper tries to understand what is the nature of relationship between women's empowerment and their experience of spousal violence? In doing so, it specifically explores how this relationship is interceded by regional specificities. Based on an analysis of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS)-5 data in India, this paper observes that the relationship between women's empowerment and domestic violence is contentious. However, women having some education and using mobile phones are less vulnerable. Hence, this study concludes that mobile phones and Internet-based applications as well as community-based interventions could be the effective measures to end domestic violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. 'The Buddha in the home': dwelling with domestic violence in urban Sri Lanka.
- Author
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Abeyasekera, Asha L.
- Subjects
GENDER-based violence ,URBAN violence ,DOMESTIC violence ,SOCIAL norms ,HOUSEKEEPING - Abstract
This paper examines how home is produced by women under conditions of violence. It contends why domestic violence (DV) is not a disruption, but a 'condition of possibility' in the production of the ideal home. Drawing on cultural aphorisms the paper highlights the role of gender norms in simultaneously idealizing the mother and normalizing DV in Sri Lanka. The veneration of the mother in all ethno-religious communities, the paper argues, is conditioned upon a woman's capacity for nurture and her absorption of violence through the embodiment of feminine virtues: selflessness, forbearance, and long-suffering. The paper contributes to discussions of home and domestic violence in three ways. First, it illuminates cross-cultural meanings of home and the gendered labour that produces it. Second, it describes how women dwell with DV by embodying gender norms through acts of care and repair. Finally, the paper aims to underscore the materiality of gender norms in creating a 'moral-economy of care'; that is, the ways by which cultural truisms – in postulating a triumvirate of woman-home-suffering – emotionally tethers woman to home compelling her to produce it under conditions of violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. When Intimate Partner Violence Meets Same Sex Couples: A Review of Same Sex Intimate Partner Violence.
- Author
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Rollè, Luca, Giardina, Giulia, Caldarera, Angela M., Gerino, Eva, and Brustia, Piera
- Subjects
SEXUAL partners ,INTIMATE partner violence ,GAY couples ,COUPLES ,LESBIAN couples ,VIOLENCE in the community ,LGBTQ+ people - Abstract
Over the past few decades, the causes of and intervention for intimate partner violence (IPV) have been approached and studied. This paper presents a narrative review on IPV occurring in same sex couples, that is, same sex IPV (SSIPV). Despite the myth that IPV is exclusively an issue in heterosexual relationships, many studies have revealed the existence of IPV among lesbian and gay couples, and its incidence is comparable to (Turell, 2000) or higher than that among heterosexual couples (Messinger, 2011; Kelley et al., 2012). While similarities between heterosexual and lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) IPV were found, unique features and dynamics were present in LGB IPV. Such features are mainly related to identification and treatment of SSIPV in the community and to the need of taking into consideration the role of sexual minority stressors. Our findings show there is a lack of studies that address LGB individuals involved in IPV; this is mostly due to the silence that has historically existed around violence in the LGB community, a silence built on fears and myths that have obstructed a public discussion on the phenomenon. We identified the main themes discussed in the published studies that we have reviewed here. The reviews lead us to the conclusion that it is essential to create a place where this subject can be freely discussed and approached, both by LGB and heterosexual people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. RUSSIA’S OTHER WAR: PATRIARCHAL CULTURE AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE.THE #ЯНЕБОЮСЬСКАЗАТЬ (#IAMNOTAFRAIDTOSPEAK)JULY 2016 CAMPAIGN ON VKONTAKTE.
- Author
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Miron, Ioana-Mădălina
- Subjects
FEMINISM ,CULTURE conflict ,DOMESTIC violence ,VIOLENCE against women ,GENDER-based violence - Abstract
This article is dedicated to a controversial topic for Russian society, namely the campaign #ЯнеБоюсьСказать (#IamNotAfraidToSpeak) that took place in VKontakte’s Russian speaking community in July 2016. First the article is based on a theoretical framework that draws attention to the concept of contentious politics and feminist movement. Second, I analysed the messages associated with #IamNotAfraidToSpeak, and argue that the campaign raised the visibility of the problem of domestic violence and patriarchal culture in the post-Soviet Russia, and this helped increase the significance of women’s linguistic agency and made #IamNotAfraidToSpeak the first large-scale feminist movement in Russia. Moreover, in addition to the theoretical background, the paper focuses on a case study: The #ЯНеБоюсьСказать(#IAmNotAfraidToSpeak) campaign of July 2016 on VKontakte. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. 'And that was her choice': Dutch general practitioners' perceptions of the autonomy of patients with non-western migration backgrounds who experience domestic violence.
- Author
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Tack, Saartje and Saharso, Sawitri
- Subjects
PATIENT autonomy ,IMMIGRANTS ,RESEARCH funding ,GENERAL practitioners ,INTERVIEWING ,DECISION making ,BIOETHICS ,DUTCH people ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,DOMESTIC violence ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Women in the Netherlands with non-western migration backgrounds experience domestic violence at the intersection of culture and gender, and visit their general practitioners (GPs) with health concerns related to the violence. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with GPs, this paper illuminates how GPs navigate the process of decision-making around intervention in domestic violence, with particular attention to the role of autonomy. Patient autonomy is a core principle in Dutch general practice. The term refers to the principle that GPs must respect that competent adults can make autonomous decisions about the care they do and do not want, and that GPs must respect patients' views, choices, and ways of life. The interview data shows great variation in how GPs respond in situations of domestic violence against women with non-western migration backgrounds. Deploying 'somatechnics of perception', this paper explores how GPs' perceptions of their patients' autonomy are both the agent and effect of a complex and embodied negotiation of gender, race, culture, ethnicity, medical ethics, and morality. In highlighting how these patients' autonomy is rendered (un)intelligible and (il)legible in contextually specific ways, this paper sheds light on how GPs in the Netherlands can better assist women with non-western migration backgrounds who experience domestic violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The benefits of using a Shared Lives type community response to support survivors of domestic abuse with disabilities and older survivors.
- Author
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Warburton-Wynn, Amanda
- Subjects
COMMUNITY support ,SAFETY ,COST control ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SEXUAL partners ,SEX crimes ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,SPOUSES ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,HELP-seeking behavior ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,CRIME victims ,DOMESTIC violence ,GOVERNMENT programs ,QUALITY of life ,PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse ,NEEDS assessment ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,LEARNING disabilities ,REFUGEES - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to introduce the concept of using the well-established Shared Lives approach to support survivors of domestic abuse with complex needs including those with learning and physical disabilities, older people and carers. Design/methodology/approach: Survivors with complex needs are often excluded from traditional domestic abuse support services thus increasing their risk and making recovery impossible. Using the Shared Lives approach in suitable cases could address gaps in provision and improve the outcomes for survivors with disabilities, older survivors and carers. Findings: The paper draws on evidence from reports and research about the experiences of these cohorts of survivors to explain how the Shared Lives approach could increase support options for specific categories of survivors. Practical implications: Using the Shared Lives approach to support cohorts of victims/survivors who experience barriers to accessing support could improve outcomes for these people, reduce risk of serious harm and improve quality of life. Originality/value: With the recent recommendation from Association of Directors of Adult Social Services around increasing use of Shared Lives, this paper provides one potential way to meet this recommendation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Domestic Violence in Rural Serbia: Etiological-Phenomenological Approach.
- Author
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Soković, Snežana and Ranđelović, Višnja
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,STEREOTYPES ,VIOLENCE against women - Abstract
The aim of the paper is to point out the etiological-phenomenological dimension of domestic violence in rural areas of Serbia. Although it reflects all the general characteristics of domestic violence, in the etiological and phenomenological sense, domestic violence in rural areas also has certain specifics that are important for a closer definition of the necessary prevention measures. Based on research conducted in rural areas around the world, the authors indicate in the paper that the causes of domestic violence in rural areas are the same in Serbia, namely traditional patterns of behavior, adopted cultural norms and geographical isolation. All forms of violence (physical, psychological, emotional and sexual) are present, as well as in urban areas of Serbia. However, violence in rural areas is much less often reported, due to the normalization of violence, the fact that everyone in small areas knows each other, shame, the presence of strong stereotypes, etc. The perpetrators of domestic violence coming from rural areas are most often men (in 90% of cases) and are mostly violent. Victims of domestic violence in rural areas are most often women, characterized by economic dependence, lack of personal income or property, the fact that they have nowhere to go. An additional problem is the lack of official statistical data on domestic violence in rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Disutility of Stock Market Losses: Evidence From Domestic Violence.
- Author
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Lin, Tse-Chun and Pursiainen, Vesa
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,DOMESTIC violence ,FINANCIAL crises ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,STOCK prices ,WEEKEND Effect (Finance) ,RATE of return on stocks - Abstract
Stock returns during the week are negatively associated with the reported incidence of domestic violence during the weekend. This relationship is primarily driven by negative returns. The incidence of domestic violence increases with the magnitude of losses, and the effect increases with local stock market participation. Our findings suggest that negative wealth shocks caused by stock market crashes can affect stress levels within intimate relationships, escalate arguments, and trigger domestic violence. Stock market losses may reduce household utility beyond the shock to financial wealth, supporting gain-loss models where disutility from losses outweighs the utility from gains of a similar magnitude. Authors have furnished an Internet Appendix , which is available on the Oxford University Press Web site next to the link to the final published paper online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. My Reactions to "Johnson's Typology of Intimate Partner Violence: Reflecting on the First 25 Years and Looking Ahead".
- Author
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Johnson, Michael P.
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,INTIMATE partner violence ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,CONTROL (Psychology) - Abstract
After a brief expression of my gratitude for the support I have received over the years, I move on to make five general points about the papers in this special issue. First, I believe that, taken together, the three literature reviews accomplish three quite different tasks: (a) they document the nature of the impact of the typology on the research literature, (b) they affirm the validity of the typology, and (c) they illustrate the general problem of the publication of seriously flawed analyses in refereed journals. Second, the other six papers in the issue highlight the importance of attending to the impact of specific context on the dynamics of intimate partner violence. Third, although the typology has certainly had considerable impact on both research and practice, there is probably still a large body of research and practice that does not attend to the distinctions that I believe are central to understanding and intervening in intimate partner violence. Fourth, there is always an interpersonal context within which the specific violent acts of intimate partner violence are embedded, and the most important aspects of that interpersonal context are matters of coercion and control. Finally, and most important, gender heavily influences matters of coercion and control and must therefore remain central to our understanding of intimate partner violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Femicide Frames in Ireland's Two Leading Newspapers, the Irish Independent and The Irish Times.
- Author
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Marron, Maria
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,VIOLENCE against women ,DOMESTIC violence ,FEMICIDE ,GENDER-based violence ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,LAW reform ,CRIME - Abstract
The article offers information on the portrayal of femicide in Ireland's major newspapers, The Irish Independent and The Irish Times. Topics discussed include the differing media frames used by each paper; the impact of these frames on public perception; and the broader implications for societal attitudes toward domestic violence and femicide.
- Published
- 2024
24. Domestic Risk Factors, Violence and Marital Dissolution: Evidence from Demographic and Health Survey of India.
- Author
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Maiti, Surya Nath
- Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Development Research is the property of Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Bowen family systems theory and practice: Illustration and critique revisited.
- Author
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Brown, Jenny and Errington, Lauren
- Subjects
FAMILY psychotherapy ,SERIAL publications ,FAMILY medicine ,TEACHING methods ,EMOTIONS ,FAMILY systems theory ,PSYCHOLOGY ,DOMESTIC violence ,FAMILY assessment ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,THEORY ,FEMINIST criticism ,SELF-perception - Abstract
This paper overviews Bowen family systems theory and its approach to family therapy. It aims to introduce this influential approach and a sample of developments in theory and practice since Bowen's first publications of his research and theory. This paper is the second edition of a 1999 article with the same title (Brown, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy, 20, 94 and 1999) and, 25 years later, offers new insights from the original author's ongoing research into the theory. This new edition is in collaboration with a second author and Bowen theory scholar, bringing fresh perspectives on the theory's applicability to family therapy practice. The core concepts are presented briefly, and a case example with a parent and symptomatic adolescent demonstrates how theory informs the role of the therapist and the therapeutic work. Examples of criticisms of Bowen theory are also discussed, including the misinterpretation around the idea of emotion in Bowen theory that is communicated in Gottman's training. Differentiation of self is clarified as the integration of emotion and intellect rather than privileging one over another, which affords the opportunity for individuals to avoid being governed by the invisible strings of sensitivities in relationships and instead be themselves in good emotional contact with the other person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Intimate partner violence and Bowen family systems theory: promoting safety and expanding capacity of families.
- Author
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Burke, Katherine and Post, Amie
- Subjects
FAMILIES & psychology ,INTIMATE partner violence -- Law & legislation ,SAFETY ,FAMILY psychotherapy ,PATIENTS' families ,RISK assessment ,VICTIMS ,INTIMATE partner violence ,MEDICAL personnel ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,SOCIAL justice ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CULTURE ,FAMILY relations ,EMOTIONS ,FAMILY systems theory ,CLIENT relations ,DOMESTIC violence ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Family violence is becoming increasingly visible in Australia, with many state and federal governments taking on more responsibility to address family violence and its impacts on those affected. Current efforts are focused on practice frameworks, identifying and responding to risk factors, and social justice frameworks including legislating against family violence in a range of jurisdictions and addressing more broadly the structural and cultural forces that perpetuate violence and further oppress those victimised. Family violence is not unique to Australia, with prevalence rates internationally suggesting family violence occurs irrespective of country, race, age, culture, effectiveness of social policies or socioeconomic status. This paper explores relevant foundational concepts of Bowen family systems theory (BFST) as it relates to family violence and explores opportunities to evolve practice in this area. BFST offers a unique contribution towards addressing family violence, particularly in relation to the public health challenge of addressing family polyvictimisation. The paper also explores how BFST conceptualises family violence and the role of the professional in working with the family as a single emotional unit. The unique focus of BFST on observing and defining self within the emotional family unit through observation of the underlying multigenerational emotional patterns of functioning provides unique opportunities to evolve and develop both the capacity of clinicians and responses to families who are navigating the serious and challenging impacts of family violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Examining reasons for victim retraction in domestic violence and abuse: A qualitative analysis of police retraction statements in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Hopkins, Anna
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,VICTIMS of domestic violence ,FATHERS ,PROBLEM solving ,CIVIL procedure ,CRIMINAL justice system ,FATHER-child relationship ,POLICE - Abstract
Understanding the factors that influence domestic violence and abuse (DVA) victims to withdraw from the Criminal Justice System globally continues to be a key focus for professionals and academics working within this area. There is a dearth of extant literature examining the motivations behind victim withdrawal, particularly retraction occurring post provision of an initial statement. This paper examines the phenomenon of retraction, by thematically analysing N = 60 police retraction statements (PRS) collected by police officers in a large suburban police force in the North West of England. In examining these statements, insight can also be garnered from those victims still in an active relationship with their abusers. Findings highlight female victims' motivations for retraction and are framed around victim problem solving including: a) accepting the relationship which resulted in a discordance in proceeding with the prosecution of the abuser b) rejecting the relationship thereby rendering the prosecution as redundant c) engaging in procedural problem solving where alternative measures such as civil actions were sought to substitute a CJS prosecution and d) the effect of children where motivations were split between retracting to return to the complete family unit including the victim as the mother and retracting due to recognising the importance of the father's role without involvement from the mother. Notwithstanding limitations, this paper demonstrates that there is significant value in conducting an analysis of PRSs in furthering the understanding of why victims choose to retract at this point in their prosecution journey. The extracts from this dataset add insight and understanding into DVA female victim motivations to retract post-initial statement provision and highlight the differences within victim populations who retract their original statement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
28. ‘“She Tells Me I'm Pushy” is More Likely than the Man Directly Admitting to Being Pushy’: Practitioners’ Views on Screening and Assessing Risk of Intimate Partner Sexual Violence.
- Author
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Helps, Nicola
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,SEXUAL assault ,DOMESTIC violence ,VIOLENCE against women ,RISK assessment - Abstract
Domestic and family violence (DFV) and sexual violence intersect, with sexual violence often perpetrated by an intimate partner alongside other forms of DFV. While DFV perpetrator interventions are commonly used in response to DFV perpetration, scant research has considered how these interventions identify and address sexual violence, including intimate partner sexual violence (IPSV). Drawing on the findings from an Australian study which involved a survey of 97 practitioners, this paper explores screening and risk assessment of IPSV within the DFV perpetrator intervention context. The research findings demonstrate limited screening and risk assessment of IPSV, particularly when compared to other forms of DFV. This demonstrates a clear need for focused attention on IPSV as part of broader efforts to hold perpetrators accountable for all forms of DFV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
29. Social Concern Theory and Family Violence Among Latino Families.
- Author
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Zavala, Egbert and Caraballo, Krystlelynn
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SOCIAL capital ,HISPANIC Americans ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIAL theory ,FAMILIES ,SOCIAL norms ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ETHICS ,SURVEYS ,DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
This paper examines whether Agnew's Social Concern Theory can be applied to explain family violence perpetration among Latino families. Social concern theory maintains that people have biological inclinations to care for the welfare of others, desire close ties with certain individuals, follow certain moral intuitions, and conform to the behaviors of others. As such, this study tests whether an individual's social capital (care about the welfare of others), familismo (desire for close ties), code of the streets (moral intuitions), and obligation to obey the police (conformity to social norms) is associated with family violence among a Latino sample. Using data from the El Paso Neighborhood Survey Project, which surveyed a random sample of 1,059 adults living in El Paso County, Texas in 2014, findings indicate that three of out of four theoretical constructs in the final model were found to be significant. Higher levels of social capital and familismo were associated with lower odds of perpetrating family violence, while code of the streets increased family violence. Obligation to obey the police was non-significant. Agnew's theory modestly explained family violence among Latino families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
30. Women escaping domestic violence to achieve safe housing: an integrative review.
- Author
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Stulz, Virginia, Francis, Lyn, Naidu, Anshu, and O'Reilly, Rebecca
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DOMESTIC violence ,WOMEN household employees ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTIMATE partner violence ,HOUSING ,INTEGRATIVE medicine - Abstract
Background: This integrative review summarises original research that explores women's experiences of escaping domestic violence to achieve safe housing. Methods: Integrative review. A robust search strategy was conducted using the following databases: Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health (CINAHL), Cochrane, Medline and PubMed. All articles were assessed for quality using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tools (MMAT) scoring. Whittemore and Knafl's (2005) five stage approach was used to analyse the primary literature related to women's and stakeholders' experiences of escaping domestic violence to achieve safe housing. Results: A total of 41 articles were retrieved and 12 papers were included in this review (six qualitative, one quantitative and five mixed methods) that fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Four overarching themes were identified: 'Experiences of leaving domestic violence', 'Barriers to achieving safe housing', 'Facilitators to achieving safe housing' and 'The road to recovery'. The 'Experiences of leaving domestic violence' theme included two subthemes: 'the losses' and 'ongoing contact with the perpetrator'. The 'Barriers to achieving safe housing' theme included three subthemes: 'financial insecurity', 'being judged by others for leaving and service availability'. The 'Facilitators to achieving safe housing' theme included two sub-themes: 'support, partnership, and collaboration between women and service providers' and 'feeling respected and heard'. The 'Road to recovery' theme included two sub-themes: 'being a good mother' and 'empowerment after leaving domestic violence'. Conclusions: This review has highlighted the need for service and health care providers to work together and collaborate effectively with the woman experiencing and escaping domestic violence, especially in rural and remote areas. This means giving women access to the most suitable educational resources and services that are appropriate for their unique situation. Tailoring support for women is crucial to enable women to achieve safe housing and to be able to live a safe life with their children, away from the perpetrator of the domestic violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Divorce Narratives and Class Inequalities in Indonesia.
- Author
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Rinaldo, Rachel, Nisa, Eva F., and Nurmila, Nina
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MARRIAGE ,RESEARCH funding ,ENDOWMENTS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ISLAM ,INTERVIEWING ,SEX distribution ,SPOUSES ,COURTS ,MUSLIMS ,DIVORCE ,DOMESTIC violence ,SOCIOLOGY ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIAL classes ,MARRIAGE & family therapy ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In the past 20 years, divorce has increased in Indonesia. Indonesian statistics show that divorces initiated by women exceed those by men. One issue that is often neglected is how socioeconomic differences also play a role in this matter. Drawing on our collaborative research on Muslim divorces in Indonesia, this paper focuses on the interplay between divorce strategies and socioeconomic differences among Muslim couples. Our in-depth interviews with 93 Muslim men and women and 19 judges from Islamic courts show that class differences shape distinctive dynamics of divorce among Muslim Indonesians. Couples from less educated, lower-income backgrounds accept marriage dissolution more easily, with women becoming much less tolerant of men's behaviors such as infliction of domestic violence, infidelity, and failure to provide financial support. Educated, middle-class urban couples divorce for similar reasons but tend to experience a lengthier process accompanied by complex layers of conflict. Many educated women's narratives emphasize their ability to support themselves through working, and a desire to be free of a bad marriage at any cost. Class and education thus contribute to significant differences in the experience and trajectories of divorce in Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. VIOLENȚA ȘI HĂRȚUIREA LA LOCUL DE MUNCĂ, ÎNTRE CONCEPT ȘI REGLEMENTARE. ASPECTE DE PRACTICĂ JUDICIARĂ.
- Author
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MOARCĂȘ, CLAUDIA-ANA and ZĂRNESCU, VALENTINA LIDIA
- Subjects
HARASSMENT ,VIOLENCE in the workplace ,VIOLENCE ,EMPLOYERS - Abstract
The paper analyses the concepts of violence and harassment at work in order to: (i) better understand the complexity of the processes; (ii) promote a multidimensional perception of the role played by colleagues and superiors; (iii) more clearly define the two concepts and while observing the links between conflict and harassment. The analysis is based on the definition of the concepts, the regulation at international, European and national level, as well as the impact on workers' mental health and the reflection of their application in judicial practice both from the employer's and the worker's perspective, in the context of Romania's ratification of the ILO Convention No 190/2019 on the elimination of violence and harassment in the world of work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
33. The Challenges and Opportunities of Reviewing Domestic Abuse-Related Deaths by Suicide in England and Wales.
- Author
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Rowlands, James and Dangar, Sarah
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SUICIDE risk factors ,MORTALITY risk factors ,INTERVIEWING ,CAUSES of death ,THEMATIC analysis ,DOMESTIC violence ,LITERATURE reviews ,HOMICIDE - Abstract
Purpose: In England and Wales, Domestic Homicide Reviews (DHRs) are conducted into domestic abuse-related killings. In 2016, deaths by suicide were brought into the scope of this review system and, to distinguish them from reviews into domestic homicides, we describe these as 'Suicide Domestic Abuse-Related Death Reviews' (S-DARDR). To date, S-DARDRs have been little considered and, in response, this empirical paper seeks to unpack this process. Method: In a larger study, 40 DHR participants were interviewed, and a reflexive thematic analysis was undertaken. 18 participants discussed S-DARDRs. These interviews were re-read, with relevant extracts identified and re-analysed thematically. Through a shared critical reflection, we drew on our practice experience to interrogate the themes generated from the interviews and offer insight into the underlying challenges. Results: From the interviews, we generated four themes relating to commissioning and delivery; the involvement of stakeholders; intersections with other statutory processes; and purpose. Based on our shared critical reflection, we identified the underlying challenges as an under conceptualisation of S-DARDRs, alongside their de-mooring from the criminal justice system. Taken together, these challenges have implications for the conduct of S-DARDRs. We identify recommendations for policy and practice to address these challenges. Conclusion: The development of S-DARDRs has been little considered and challenges arise around when and how they should be undertaken. A shared understanding of key concepts and expectations around delivery is necessary if S-DARDRs are to enable robust learning and be a driver for systems change while also being accessible and understood by all stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Women and Invisible Boundaries: A Case of Slippage in Sanitation in Two Gram Panchayats, Shravasti, UP, India.
- Author
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Khare, Kopal and Suresh, Lavanya
- Subjects
SANITATION ,WOMEN'S health ,CHILD marriage ,WELL-being ,DOMESTIC violence ,LIBEL & slander - Abstract
Sustainable management of water and sanitation is inextricably linked with women's health and well-being. This paper investigates slippage in sanitation, experienced by women beneficiaries of the Swacch Bharat Mission Rural programme through Amartya Sen's conception of justice. A total of 135 individuals were interviewed from 49 households in Kanjadwa and Madhnagar Manoharpur Gram Panchayats, Shravasti, India, out of which 90 were women. As per findings, 30% of women practice open defaecation despite possessing toilets, resulting in slippage. The Sanitation Well-being framework is deployed to study slippage and its linkage with women's agency. Personal, cultural, and structural factors contributing to this are child marriage, denial of education and employment opportunities, slut shaming, victim blaming, domestic violence, and character assassination. These are made worse by the state adoption of misogynistic IEC messages that reinforce cultural stereotypes and worsen women's condition. In the quest to attain ODF status in Ikauna Block, UP, the current sanitation programme became a tool of suppression. Consequently, we understand that open defaecation among women is an outcome of the basic unfreedoms rather than a volitional choice that prevents them from experiencing sanitation well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Why do people participate in research interviews? Participant orientations and ethical contracts in interviews with victims of interpersonal violence.
- Author
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Bredal, Anja, Stefansen, Kari, and Bjørnholt, Margunn
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VIOLENCE ,SEX crimes ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTIMATE partner violence ,INTERVIEWING ,HUMAN research subjects ,CRIME victims ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Researchers are increasingly interested in why people want to participate in qualitative interview studies, particularly what they hope to gain from participating. The present paper contributes to this research agenda by analysing the motivations of victims of interpersonal violence: a group that is considered ethically challenging to involve in research, given their history of being intruded upon. The analysis is based on 174 qualitative interviews from three separate studies: two on intimate partner violence and one on sexual assault. A key finding is that many victims welcome the opportunity to participate and often use the interviews for their own purposes. We identified three different 'participant orientations', or ways victims relate to the interview and the research, including 'telling for oneself', 'telling for others' and 'telling for the researcher'. We discuss how these orientations imply different ethical contracts between the participant and researcher and their links to recruitment methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. An Integrated, Multi-Level Approach to Interpersonal Aggression and Family Violence.
- Author
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Michalski, Joseph
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,HEURISTIC ,SOCIAL psychology ,INTERPERSONAL communication ,HUMAN behavior - Abstract
The study of interpersonal aggression has been carried out for the most part in separate spheres by experts from an array of academic disciplines. To advance a deeper understanding of these issues, however, requires a more conciliatory and interdisciplinary approach. The article offers just such an integrated approach, using a multi-level heuristic framework that has direct parallels with ecological modeling. In addition, the approach expands the analytic focus to reflect different aspects of complex human behavior, which include: 1) the behavioral investment framework, or the bio-psychological reality of the human animal; 2) the socialization framework, or the social psychological aspects of human learning and development; 3) the justification framework, or the language, knowledge, and meaning systems that one acquires to facilitate interpersonal communication and to justify one's actions; 4) the social location framework, or the social interactional dynamics of interpersonal relationships that animate one's daily life as a member of various groups and social networks; and 5) the societal context framework, or the broader institutional forms and sociocultural conditions within which individuals and groups are situated. The current approach bridges human neurophysiology and psychology with sociology in a developmental, ecological context that examines each dimension of human behavior. While the five dimensions can be separated analytically, in practice these overlap to exert multiple influences. Such a conciliatory framing permits a more comprehensive analysis of human social animals as situated within their natural environments. The paper outlines how each of the five levels contributes to expressions of interpersonal aggression by elaborating on key mechanisms that operate across the different levels of informational complexity. Several examples of empirical research are cited to illustrate the core principles that operate within and across the five complementary frameworks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Adult Maltese Women's Understanding of How Childhood Domestic Violence Has Impacted Their Relationships with Their Parents and Siblings: A Grounded Theory Study.
- Author
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Sammut-Scerri, Clarissa and Vetere, Arlene
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,SIBLINGS ,MOTHER-child relationship ,PARENT-child relationships ,GROUNDED theory - Abstract
Most of the literature that has looked at children's relationships with their parents in the domestic violence context has focused solely on the children's relationship with one parent or is studied from the perspective of one parent, usually the mother. Sibling relationships in the same context are also under-studied. This paper explores in more detail the complexity of children's relationships with their mothers, fathers, and siblings over time from the perspective of adult women and survivors of childhood domestic violence. Methods: A grounded theory methodology was used to analyse the interviews with 15 women aged twenty to forty-three years of age living in Malta. Results: the analysis showed that the domestic violence context remains significant in these important relationships for these women. The relationship with the father remains strongly influenced by the dynamics of fear, love, and retaliation, with cycles of cut-off and connection from the adult daughter's end. The relationship with the mother is complicated—feelings of love that are seen as having been limited and complicated by betrayal if there was abuse from the mother. Similarly, for the siblings, the roles of the early family of origin remain persistent and significant. However, in some of these relationships, there has been transformation, reconciliation, and forgiveness. The article offers implications for therapeutic practice for dealing with the complexity of these relationships and ideas for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. When Families Become Perpetrators: A Case Series on Familial Trafficking.
- Author
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White, C. Nicole, Robichaux, Katherine, Huang, Ashley, and Luo, Claire
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,PARENTS ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,SEX crimes ,HUMAN services programs ,PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims ,PARENT-child relationships ,FAMILIES ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CRIME victims ,HUMAN rights ,THEMATIC analysis ,DOMESTIC violence ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,CASE studies ,MEDICAL screening ,HUMAN trafficking ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Purpose: Human trafficking occurs when a person uses force, fraud, or coercion to obtain an act or service from another person. While trafficking is often depicted as a crime perpetrated by strangers, recent literature has found family members can also be traffickers. Only four peer reviewed studies have specifically examined familial trafficking. Method: The current study builds upon this sparse literature by reviewing medical charts of patients in a large hospital system who were identified as survivors of familial trafficking between October 2017 and September 2021. Descriptive statistics are reported for all 39 identified patients. Results: Majority of patients were female (92.3%) and under 36 years old (56.4%; M = 34.2, SD = 11.6). Despite most patients now being adults, all except one were minors at the time the trafficking began. Parents were the most common perpetrator (66.7%) followed by aunt/uncle (12.8%). Nine cases were chosen, given level of detail in patient charts, to be highlighted in a case series to further describe the experiences of these survivors. Cases examined included labor trafficking, parents as perpetrators, intersection of substance use, and males as victims. Force was the most common means of control used and often manifested as physical or sexual abuse that preceded the exploitation. Another reoccurring theme was substance use being a factor when parents were perpetrators. Conclusion: The findings from this paper can help inform screening techniques by encouraging providers to inquire about familial relationships. Findings may also be helpful for providers working with this population and future research endeavors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Similar But Different: Intimate Partner Violence Experienced by Women and Men.
- Author
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Roebuck, Benjamin S., McGlinchey, Diana, Lysova, Alexandra V., Hastie, Kristine, and Taylor, Marissa
- Subjects
SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL media ,INTIMATE partner violence ,SEX crimes ,MENTAL health ,HELP-seeking behavior ,EXPERIENCE ,DOMESTIC violence ,CRIMINAL justice system ,GENDER-based violence - Abstract
Purpose: Research on intimate partner violence (IPV) is generally focused on female survivors. However, in Canada, about half of all self-reported victims of IPV are men and 1 in 5 calls to police for domestic violence are for male victims. This paper takes a comparative approach to understanding survivors' experiences of IPV. Methods: Across Canada, 110 female and 45 male survivors of IPV were recruited through media, social media, and listservs for a survey and interviews in 2017. Results: Findings indicate areas of similarity (healthcare needs; difficulty accessing formal support; fear of false accusations) and areas of difference (availability of formal support; types of violence experienced most often; interactions with the justice system). Women and men reported similar types of IPV, with women experiencing higher rates of sexual violence, stalking, and damage to property. Women and men reported similar physical and mental health consequences following IPV. Men were less satisfied than women with the response of the justice system, and both female and male participants encountered gender bias within the justice system. Some women reported being turned away from services that were at their maximum capacity, and men reported difficulty identifying IPV-related services for male survivors. Conclusions: Findings can be used by frontline service providers and the justice system to ensure that services are gender-inclusive and gender-sensitive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. An evaluation of education videos for women experiencing domestic and family violence in healthcare settings: protocol for a mixed methods systematic review.
- Author
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Gillespie, Kerri, Adhikary, Sam, Kimball, Hayley, and Branjerdporn, Grace
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,WOMEN household employees ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL background ,WOMEN'S education - Abstract
Background: Domestic and family violence (DFV) is a significant public health issue that poses a high risk to women, globally. Women experiencing DFV have higher rates of healthcare utilisation than women not experiencing DFV. Healthcare services are therefore well placed to address DFV and deliver education and awareness interventions to women. Video interventions are a strategy to deliver education to women, while overcoming barriers such as language, literacy, lack of rapport with clinician, or unwillingness to disclose. The current review will aim to further understand the characteristics, methods of evaluation, and outcomes of DFV video education interventions for perinatal women. Methods: The review will be reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) statement. A systematic search will be conducted of the following databases: Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, PsycArticles, Scopus, and Web of Science Core Collection. Two independent reviewers will screen titles and abstracts against the inclusion criteria, followed by a full text screening of eligible articles. A third reviewer will resolve discrepancies. All study types will be included. Only studies published in English will be included. Risk of bias will be assessed using the Quality Assessment with Diverse Studies (QuADS) tool. Data will undergo an aggregate mixed method synthesis informed by The Joanna Briggs Institute, before being analysed using a thematic approach. Discussion: This systematic review will provide evidence on best practice for the creation, delivery, and evaluation of DFV video interventions for women in the peripartum. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO registration number CRD42023475338. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. 'Who's got my back?': Worker safety in the context of domestic abuse.
- Author
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Humphreys, Cathy, Isobe, Jasmin, and Kertesz, Margaret
- Subjects
CORPORATE culture ,DOCUMENTATION ,GOVERNMENT policy ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,COMMUNITIES of practice ,QUALITATIVE research ,WORK environment ,ETHNOLOGY research ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,THEMATIC analysis ,DOMESTIC violence ,SOCIAL support ,DATA analysis software ,INDUSTRIAL safety ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,WELL-being - Abstract
The safety of practitioners working in the area of domestic abuse is a current subject of research and practice concern, as services endeavour to better understand constantly evolving tactics of violence and abuse and respond appropriately. This paper reports on a subset of findings from a practice‐led research project focussed on capacity‐building workers and their organizations to address domestic abuse, which highlighted the ongoing concerns expressed by practitioners—particularly female practitioners—about their own physical, emotional, and professional safety. Ethnographic notes were taken of Community of Practice discussions in four regions of New South Wales, Australia, involving 69 senior health practitioners from a range of service streams: specialist domestic abuse, mental health, substance use, and child protection. Themes identified through thematic analysis included the following: a tailored approach to practising safely; attending to physical safety; threats to professional identity; promoting emotional well‐being; documentation to support worker safety; and attending to cultural safety. These themes are encapsulated in the practitioner question: Who's got my back?—highlighting the importance of legislation, policy, and practices that provide an environment in which safety and support are embedded in a culture of care at every organizational level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A consilient, multi-level model of corporal punishment.
- Author
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Michalski, Joseph H
- Subjects
HUMAN behavior ,DOMESTIC violence ,MULTILEVEL models ,HUMAN beings ,DISCIPLINE of children ,FAMILY relations ,CORPORAL punishment ,SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
The article develops an explanation of corporal punishment (CP) as an expression of family violence by developing a multi-level, conciliatory model of human behavior. The synthesis builds upon a review of the relevant analytic approaches and empirical evidence spanning multiple levels of human behavior to include five interrelated frameworks: (1) behavioral investment; (2) socialization; (3) cultural justification; (4) social location; and (5) societal context. The analytic levels highlight the various explanatory principles that address questions relevant mainly to investigators who study behavior in terms of different levels of informational complexity. The paper outlines the most important factors that shape the use and non-use of CP within family settings. The model identifies key ontogenetic and biophysiological factors linked to the fitness of parents' offspring, along with primary socialization processes and cultural justification mechanisms that increase the probability of the intergenerational transmission of violence. In addition, the model identifies the sociological dimensions of family relationships and the importance of social locational variables in shaping parental usage of CP, as well as the importance of communities and institutions as situated within sociocultural contexts. The main conclusion suggests that to understand and explain more fully why human beings use violence in the context of familial relationships—including corporal punishment practices—analysts must consider the different influences and possible impacts of factors across all five levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The women's refuge as 'homeplace': Black and Asian women's refuges in Britain as spaces of community and resistance (1980–2000).
- Author
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James Robertson, Charlotte
- Subjects
WOMEN'S shelters ,BLACK women ,RACISM ,DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
Black Feminist theorist bell hooks has written of the way in which Black women construct 'homeplaces' as 'spaces of care and nurturance in the face of the brutal harsh reality of racist oppression.' But what happens when the home is not a place of safety for Black women? Beginning in the late 1970s, groups of Black women in Britain began to establish women's refuges designed to meet the needs of Black and Asian women who were experiencing domestic abuse. In so doing, they were providing an alternative homeplace where women could be safe, not only from abusive partners, but also from racism they sometimes experienced in mainstream women's refuges. This paper argues that specialist refuges were important spaces where Black women could heal from abuse, foster community, and find their political voices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. 'I haven't got anywhere safe': disabled people's experiences of hate and violence within the home.
- Author
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Burch, Leah
- Subjects
DOMESTIC violence ,HATE crimes ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,HOMESITES ,SOCIAL space ,DWELLINGS - Abstract
Copyright of Social & Cultural Geography is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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45. Narcissism and Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Oliver, Eliza, Coates, Alexander, Bennett, Joanne M., and Willis, Megan L.
- Subjects
STATISTICAL models ,SELF-evaluation ,INTIMATE partner violence ,SEX distribution ,CRIMINALS ,META-analysis ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,RESEARCH bias ,NARCISSISM ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
This review aimed to examine the relationship between intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration and trait narcissism, and whether the strength of this relationship differs depending on narcissism type (grandiose or vulnerable), the type of violence perpetrated, or the perpetrator's gender. Scopus, Medline, PsycInfo, and Academic Search Complete databases were searched on August 11, 2022. Studies were included if they were in English, measured IPV perpetration and trait narcissism, and examined the relationship between trait narcissism and IPV perpetration. Studies were excluded if they were review papers, conference extracts, book chapters, or if the data was not specific to trait narcissism. The AXIS tool was used to assess the quality and risk of bias of the studies. Twenty-two studies (N = 11,520 participants) were included in the random effects meta-analysis revealing a significant, weak, positive relationship between trait narcissism and IPV perpetration, r =.15. Subgroup analyses revealed physical IPV perpetration was not significantly related to trait narcissism while cyber and psychological IPV perpetration were significantly, positively, weakly related to trait narcissism. No significant difference in the strength of the relationship with IPV perpetration was found between males and females. The relationship between trait narcissism and IPV perpetration was significantly greater for vulnerable narcissism than grandiose narcissism. Overall, the quality of the included studies was high, and risk of bias was low. All measures were self-report and underreporting could be present given both narcissistic traits and IPV perpetration are considered socially undesirable. Future research examining these relationships should specify IPV and narcissism types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reading and reviewing Australia's Disability Commission Report and its impact on people with intellectual disabilities.
- Author
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Bigby, Christine and Hough, Alan
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PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,DOMESTIC violence ,STUDENTS with disabilities ,GUARDIAN & ward ,DISABILITIES ,CONVENTION on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities - Abstract
This editorial introduces a two-part Special Issue on the Disability Royal Commission and People with Intellectual Disabilities in Australia. The Commission was established in 2019 to investigate violence, abuse, neglect, and exploitation of people with disabilities. The Commission's Final Report, delivered in 2023, included 222 recommendations, some of which were not unanimous. The report covers a wide range of issues and includes the perspectives of people with disabilities. The Commission's work involved public hearings, private sessions, and community engagements. The report has generated controversy, as it focuses on negative experiences and poor-quality services, without exploring positive experiences and factors contributing to good quality services. The text also discusses the challenges faced by governments in responding to the Commission's recommendations and mentions the release of the Independent Review of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), which intersects with the Commission's recommendations. The text provides guidance on accessing the Commission's publications, submissions, public hearings, and other resources. It introduces the articles in Part 1 of a Special Issue that critically analyze the Commission's findings and recommendations on various topics related to people with intellectual disabilities. The text concludes by mentioning that Part 2 of the Special Issue will include additional articles on education, health, and Positive Behaviour Support. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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47. Deep care: The COVID‐19 pandemic and the work of marginal feminist organizing in India.
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Banerjee, Pallavi, Khandelwal, Chetna, and Sanyal, Megha
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COVID-19 pandemic ,FEMINISTS ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,PRAXIS (Process) ,PROPERTY rights ,MUSLIM women ,DOMESTIC violence - Abstract
In this paper, we adopt a Southern feminist epistemology to critically appraise the ways in which media discourse on gendered organizing during the Indian COVID‐19‐induced migrant crisis resists or reinforces hegemonic caste hierarchies. To contextualize this work, we briefly historicize scholarship on feminist organizing around land rights, hunger, and violence, while noting the politics of contagion and pollution narratives plaguing the pandemic discourse in India. After conducting a qualitative content analysis (QCA) followed by a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of media discourses across three tiers (international, national, and local), we found that international and national tiers of discourse largely deployed a savarna gaze that worked to 1) Reinforce brahminical and technocratic pandemic narratives and 2) Delegitimize Dalit marginal organizing feminist work and Dalit sensibilities through seven overlapping metrics of erasure. On the other hand, local tier of discourse confronted the savarna gaze, amplified voices of Dalit and Muslim women by centering their narratives of resistance, and tackled the exacerbation of casteist oppression under the pandemic in the service of emancipation. Local discourses also highlight how marginal organizing during the first pandemic lockdown involved provision of essential resources and services (food, medical care, security) for mostly Dalit and Muslim migrant workers, and women intersectionally facing domestic violence and savarna violence. Despite the brahmininal structural oppression, Dalit feminist praxis' emblematic resistance of oppressive structures, during and beyond times of crisis, constitutes what we call the work of deep care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. The Experiences of Post-Separation Survivors of Domestic Violence During the Covid-19 Pandemic: Findings From a Qualitative Study in the United Kingdom.
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Desai, Ruchi, Bandyopadhyay, Siddhartha, Zafar, Shazia, and Bradbury-Jones, Caroline
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TORTURE victims ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERVIEWING ,JUDGMENT sampling ,PARENTING ,EXPERIENCE ,SOUND recordings ,THEMATIC analysis ,DOMESTIC violence ,DIVORCE ,RESEARCH methodology ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Post-separation for domestic violence (DV) survivors is known to be a period of heightened risk of domestic homicide. Evidence points to increased rates of DV during the Covid-19 pandemic, with specific challenges in help-seeking from DV services, yet studies that capture this qualitatively are still emerging. This UK study investigated the experiences of 21 separated DV survivors (all women) during the Covid-19 pandemic. Inductive, thematic analysis highlighted participants' psychological distress, isolation, fear of Covid-19 transmission, and detachment from support networks. The findings reflect the interconnected nature of adversities experienced by DV survivors and the exacerbation of these due to the insidious, multifaceted, and synergistic impacts of DV and the pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Health professionals' intervention in the context of domestic violence against women: exploring perceptions and experiences of providing healthcare.
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Franco, Solange and Augusto, Amélia
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WORK ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of abused women ,PRIMARY health care ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,DOMESTIC violence ,PUBLIC health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,PROFESSIONAL competence - Abstract
Domestic violence against women is a complex social phenomenon and a widely recognised issue of public health, which requires that all sectors of society, including the health sector, take the necessary action to prevent and address it. This paper aims to contribute to the discussion on the role of the primary health care in addressing domestic violence against women, by analysing health professionals' perceptions of their practice as well as the difficulties they experience in providing healthcare to victims. To fulfil this aim, a qualitative approach was chosen, using focus groups with health professionals working in the area of primary health care in an inland region of Portugal. The main findings point to the lack of a specific protocol and insufficient information and skills to respond to domestic violence situations, which hinders health professionals' confidence to intervene and tends to orientate them towards a more medical response. Resulting from these findings, implications for practice are discussed: the need for clear and specific orientations to guide health professionals' intervention; the need to offer training that enables them to provide appropriate healthcare to women experiencing domestic violence; and the need to position themselves in the context of an integrated, multi-sectoral intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Healthcare and legal systems responses to coercive control: an embodied performance of one woman's experience.
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Rose, Judy, McCallum, Toni, Tsantefski, Menka, and Rathus, Zoe
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CONTROL (Psychology) ,INTIMATE partner violence ,LEGAL procedure ,FEMINISM ,MEDICAL care ,DRAMA ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DOMESTIC violence ,LOVE ,INTENTION ,POLICE ,LABOR supply ,WRITTEN communication - Abstract
This paper uses a drama-based method to illustrate the responses of healthcare and legal systems to women experiencing coercive control. This approach involved writing a play using the first-person narrative voice of a victim-survivor. We presented the play at the Stop Domestic Violence Conference (Gold Coast, Australia) in 2021. The central character, 'Kate', provided an embodied performance that enabled the conference participants to see, feel and understand experiences of coercive control from a personal perspective. We followed the trajectory of coercive control from the beginning of an intimate relationship to the time of separation. We showed how the process of coercive control escalates from love bombing, reproductive coercion, isolation, and technology-facilitated abuse until a point of police intervention. As Kate told her story, the conference audience witnessed the barriers and challenges faced by survivors of coercive control, and the emotional, financial, and psychological impacts that are intensified in geographically remote environments. They watched Kate navigate health and other systems meant to help women experiencing domestic and family violence, but that ultimately failed to deliver. Finally, the drama-based approach allowed us to present a feminist embodiment of coercive control and an innovative method for communicating inter-disciplinary research findings on domestic abuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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