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Your search for all content returned 1,603 results

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  • Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School StudentsGo to article: Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School Students

    Sexual Teen Dating Violence Victimization: Associations With Sexual Risk Behaviors Among U.S. High School Students

    Article

    Adolescent dating violence may lead to adverse health behaviors. We examined associations between sexual teen dating violence victimization (TDVV) and sexual risk behaviors among U.S. high school students using 2013 and 2015 National Youth Risk Behavior Survey data (combined n = 29,346). Sex-stratified logistic regression models were used to estimate these associations among students who had dated or gone out with someone during the past 12 months (n = 20,093). Among these students, 10.5% experienced sexual TDVV. Sexual TDVV was positively associated with sexual intercourse before age 13, four or more lifetime sexual partners, current sexual activity, alcohol or drug use before last sexual intercourse, and no pregnancy prevention during last sexual intercourse. Given significant findings among both sexes, it is valuable for dating violence prevention efforts to target both female and male students.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Domestic Violence Cases Involving Children: Effects of an Evidence-Based Prosecution ApproachGo to article: Domestic Violence Cases Involving Children: Effects of an Evidence-Based Prosecution Approach

    Domestic Violence Cases Involving Children: Effects of an Evidence-Based Prosecution Approach

    Article

    This article reports findings from the evaluation of a city-county criminal prosecution unit for domestic violence involving children. Data from 446 cases prosecuted in the first 2 years of the Joint Prosecution Unit (JPU) were compared to a matched group of 446 domestic abuse cases prosecuted by both the city and county attorneys’ offices in the 2 years prior to inception of the JPU. Results of the comparisons indicated that fewer cases were declined or dismissed by the new unit, and that cases were prosecuted at a significantly more stringent level. Multinomial logistic regression analysis indicated that child and weapon factors were associated with increased likelihood of a more serious (i.e., felony) plea for the new prosecution unit, relative to the comparison group. Results are presented in the context of addressing the difficulties inherent in the prosecution of domestic abuse and in light of the increasing awareness of the detrimental effects of domestic violence on children.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Brief ReportsGo to article: Brief Reports

    Brief Reports

    Article
    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • A Qualitative Analysis of the Temptation to Use Force in Sexual RelationshipsGo to article: A Qualitative Analysis of the Temptation to Use Force in Sexual Relationships

    A Qualitative Analysis of the Temptation to Use Force in Sexual Relationships

    Article

    College males completed a survey that asked open-ended questions concerning instances in which they might have been tempted to use force to obtain sexual contact with another person. Participants also completed Malamuth’s (1989a, 1989b) Attraction to Sexual Aggression scale, Mosher and Sirkin’s (1984) Hypermasculinity Inventory. and Burt’s (1980) Rape Myth Acceptance and Adversarial Sexual Beliefs scales. Of the 83 participants, 22 (27%) reported that they had been tempted to use force. Participants that indicated they had been tempted to use force scored significantly higher on attraction to sexual aggression and hypermasculinity than those who were never tempted. Reasons for temptation, circumstances of the tempting situations, and possible ties to sexual coercion were explored.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Predictors of Partner Abuse in a Nationally Representative Sample of Adolescents Involved in Heterosexual Dating RelationshipsGo to article: Predictors of Partner Abuse in a Nationally Representative Sample of Adolescents Involved in Heterosexual Dating Relationships

    Predictors of Partner Abuse in a Nationally Representative Sample of Adolescents Involved in Heterosexual Dating Relationships

    Article

    This article’s goals are to identify the characteristics of abusive heterosexual dating relationships among adolescents. Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health dataset, an analysis of 4,441 heterosexual relationships was completed using logistic regression models (SAS PROC GENMOD). The associations between being verbally and physically abused were examined with respect to the following relationship characteristics: involvement in sexual intercourse or pregnancy with the relationship partner, description of the relationship as a “special romantic relationship,” duration of the relationship, age at relationship initiation, and age difference between partners. The findings indicate that involvement in a sexual or “special romantic” relationship was associated with greater likelihood of being abused in both genders. Increased length of time in the relationship was associated with verbal abuse in both genders. Involvement in a pregnancy was associated with being verbally and physically abused among males. It is thus concluded that relationship characteristics play an important role in the development of abusive relationships among adolescents.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Co-Occurrence Between Marital Aggression and Parents’ Child Abuse Potential: The Impact of Cumulative StressGo to article: Co-Occurrence Between Marital Aggression and Parents’ Child Abuse Potential: The Impact of Cumulative Stress

    Co-Occurrence Between Marital Aggression and Parents’ Child Abuse Potential: The Impact of Cumulative Stress

    Article

    Evidence suggests that marital aggression and parent-to-child aggression sometimes occur within the same family, but little is known about why certain families are vulnerable to multiple forms of family aggression. According to family systems theory, negative affect in one family relationship can spread to other family relationships. According to family stress theory, aversive circumstances increase families’ vulnerability to disruption and conflict. Based on these theories, the present study tests the hypothesis that cumulative family stresses potentiate the association between marital aggression and parents’ child abuse potential. In a series of additive interactional models, husband-to-wife aggression was linked to husbands’ and wives’ child abuse potential in a context of both high financial stress and high parenting stress but was not linked in a context of low stress. Wife-to-husband aggression was linked to wives’, but not husbands’, child abuse potential in a context of high stress. These results highlight the potential role of contextual factors in the pervasiveness of aggressive exchanges across multiple family subsystems.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Childhood Victimization and Subsequent Adult Revictimization Assessed in a Nationally Representative Sample of Women and MenGo to article: Childhood Victimization and Subsequent Adult Revictimization Assessed in a Nationally Representative Sample of Women and Men

    Childhood Victimization and Subsequent Adult Revictimization Assessed in a Nationally Representative Sample of Women and Men

    Article

    The purpose of this study was to identify whether experiences of childhood physical and/or sexual victimization would increase women’s and men’s risk for victimization in adulthood by different perpetrators (any perpetrator regardless of the relationship to the victim; intimate partner perpetrator; non-intimate perpetrator) using a nationally representative sample. Results of hierarchical logistic regression analyses indicated that childhood victimization increased the risk for adulthood victimization by any perpetrator for men and women, and by an intimate partner for women but not men. Female and male victims of physical and/or sexual child abuse are at higher risk for adult victimization by non-intimate perpetrators. These results suggest the appropriateness of interventions among adults or young adults who have been victims of child abuse, to prevent any future victimization in adulthood. To guide the development of such prevention programs, research is needed to identify factors that affect the probability of adulthood victimization among child abuse victims.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • Victims of Serious Violence and Their Criminal Behavior: Subcultural Theory and BeyondGo to article: Victims of Serious Violence and Their Criminal Behavior: Subcultural Theory and Beyond

    Victims of Serious Violence and Their Criminal Behavior: Subcultural Theory and Beyond

    Article

    This paper looks at the relationship between the experiences of the victim of a serious crime and that of the offender. It shows that, in some cases, the victim experience is an important predictor of criminal behavior. An analysis of self-reported and officially recorded offense and victimization data supports the hypothesized relationship between victim and offender experiences. The results have implications for subcultural theory and a dynamic analysis of how patterns of assaultive violence are created and maintained.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • A Qualitative Investigation of Johnson’s TypologyGo to article: A Qualitative Investigation of Johnson’s Typology

    A Qualitative Investigation of Johnson’s Typology

    Article

    The couple typology described by Johnson and Ferraro (2000) provided the framework for this analysis of narrative accounts of couples in violent heterosexual relationships. Participants were 15 bidirectionally violent couples who were interviewed separately for about 1 hour each. Modified analytic induction guided the analyses. We categorized the violence in the relationships of these 15 couples in the following ways: 11 were categorized as “common couple” violence; two as “violent resistance”; one as “mutual violent control”; and one couple was categorized as what we named “pseudo-intimate terrorism.” We present rich descriptions of each category and motivations for and impacts of aggressive behavior as well as our rationale for classifying couples the way we did. Implications for intervention and future research are discussed.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims
  • An Examination of Social Cognitive Theory With Differences Among Sexually Aggressive, Physically Aggressive and Nonaggressive Children in State CareGo to article: An Examination of Social Cognitive Theory With Differences Among Sexually Aggressive, Physically Aggressive and Nonaggressive Children in State Care

    An Examination of Social Cognitive Theory With Differences Among Sexually Aggressive, Physically Aggressive and Nonaggressive Children in State Care

    Article

    Three groups of boys in Washington State care (37 sexually aggressive, 17 physically aggressive, and 15 nonaggressive) are compared on measures of behavior and cognition. Bandura’s Social Cognition theory is offered as a possible explanation for sexual aggression by children. Two theory-based hypothesis are tested. First, are sexually aggressive children cognitively deficient when compared to the other groups? Second, do the sexually aggressive children have cognitive distortions about their behavior and about sex? Similarities were found in the aggressive and sexually aggressive groups on several measures. Physically aggressive boys were found to have some sexual behavior problems. Sexually aggressive boys were also found to be physically aggressive. Physically aggressive boys were found to have the least severe and least frequent victimization history. No support was found for the first hypothesis, while some evidence of cognitive distortions regarding both social behavior and sex was found in the sexually aggressive children. Discussion and some implications for research and practice are offered.

    Source:
    Violence and Victims

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