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Intimate partner violence. --- Domestic violence --- IPV (Intimate partner violence) --- Partner violence, Intimate --- Violence
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Mansley examines how race and class impact the construction of masculinity as demonstrated through men's accounts of intimate partner violence. Using an Ecological Nested Model, she examines race and class differences in the role that institutions and culture play in promoting violence against women. These differences support the call for culturally sensitive batterer treatment programs that are not just reflective of race, but of class as well. Knowledge of these differences would allow treatment providers to tailor their treatment plans to account for such diversity and to develop culturally
Intimate partner violence. --- Masculinity. --- Race --- Social aspects.
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Abuse in dating relationships is common among adolescents. Dating abuse has a plethora of negative associated conditions or consequences. Despite the high prevalence rates and deleterious effects, however, teen dating abuse has been slow to gain recognition as a critical public-health and policy concern. Adult intimate-partner violence and marital abuse more generally have gained such recognition, as seen, especially in the past three decades, in policy, program, and legal responses, and in an extensive research literature base devoted to the problem. Adolescents, by comparison, were long over
Intimate partner violence --- Abused teenagers --- Dating violence
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Wright uses data from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods to examine the effects of neighborhood structural characteristics and intervening social mechanisms of collective efficacy, social ties, culture, and disorder on intimate partner violence victimization among females. She finds that partner violence is not solely an individual-level phenomenon and that the mechanisms identified by social disorganization theory appear to explain neighborhood influences on intimate partner violence. In particular, neighborhood concentrated immigration, collective efficacy, social ties
Intimate partner violence. --- Neighborhoods --- Violence --- Neighborhood --- Neighbourhoods --- Communities --- IPV (Intimate partner violence) --- Partner violence, Intimate --- Psychological aspects. --- Social aspects. --- Forecasting. --- Prediction --- Domestic violence
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Intimate partner violence. --- Masculinity. --- Abused men. --- Battered men --- Men --- Victims of crimes --- Masculinity (Psychology) --- Sex (Psychology) --- IPV (Intimate partner violence) --- Partner violence, Intimate --- Violence --- Domestic violence
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"Intimate Partner Sexual Violence (IPSV) is the most common type of sexual violence and a common component of domestic violence, yet most cases go unreported and service responses are often inadequate. This book brings together advice for all those professionals working with individuals who have experienced IPSV and puts forward recommendations to tackle this prevalent form of sexual violence. With contributions from leading experts on IPSV, Intimate Partner Sexual Violence is a comprehensive guide to the subject which bridges the gap between research and practice. Multidisciplinary and international in approach, the book covers key issues salient to all professionals - the impact of IPSV, reproductive coercion, the physical and psychological indicators, possible consequences of taking a case to court, and best practice service responses. One section also addresses the risks and needs of IPSV victims in different contexts, such as those in same-sex or teenage relationships, immigrant victims, and those living in rural areas or in prison."--Publisher's website.
Intimate partner violence. --- Sexual abuse victims --- Counseling of.
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Resko examines the relationship between women's economic wellbeing and intimate partner violence. Using data from the Fragile Families Survey, she examines hypotheses shaped by stress theory and social exchange theory and investigates racial and ethnic differences in these models. Her results support the notion that improving women's economic position can reduce intimate partner violence. Little evidence supported the backlash hypothesis, but in some situations men's poor performance in the labor force may be associated with an increased abuse. The strength of these results, however, differs a
Intimate partner violence. --- Women --- Abused women --- Violence against. --- Economic conditions.
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Dementia --- Mentally ill offenders. --- Intimate partner violence. --- Patients.
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