family violence chapter 2
Prevalence vs. incidence
Both are difficult to assess for the reasons outlined above.
Samples of people directly impacted by domestic violence drawn from shelters, prisons, etc. Allow for an analytical depth not provided by traditional populations.
Clinical and Forensic Samples
UCR (Uniform Crime Report) - released annually by the FBI
Compilation of arrest records nationwide Underreporting of family violence to the police (and inaction by police when reported) - especially with less severe family violence - makes these reports unreliable. Local agencies often have differing definitions of particular forms of family violence - e.g., stranger vs. non-stranger
Theoretical and methodological implications of cultural differences Distinguishing between the role of race and ethnicity
Cultural awareness
Do definitions of family violence vary across cultures? Two issues: Translation of survey measures to other languages Even if translations are acceptable, do the underlying constructs that reflect family violence in one culture reflect family violence in the next?
Cultural competence
Race-ethnicity/use of language/gender of counselor/therapist Presentation of counselor/therapist Adapting interventions to account for cultural differences and community context.
Cultural competence/sensitivity in practice
Disagreements on definitions of family violence
Disagreement among researchers Violence: e.g., using threats of violence to coerce, slapping, psychological abuse Battering vs. "normative abuse" Letting respondents decide Other examples: rape, child, neglect, elder
Longitudinal vs. Cross-sectional studies
Expensive, but vital when time-order of IV and DV are at issue. Example: strain might lead to greater family violence, but the family violence might then lead to greater strain - e.g., medical and law enforcement involvement.
Making sure counselors understand research methodology and statistical analyses Making sure researchers present results in an accessible manner.
Insufficient training:
Measurement control (surveys) vs. experimental control (experiments)
Issues of statistical control
examples of conflict between advocates and academicians
Murray Straus and the Conflict Tactics Scale Rehabilitation of perpetrators Should funding be prioritized to treat offenders or victim
Assessment and Research Design Issues Populations Sampled
Nationally representative samples NCVS, National Family Violence Survey, and National Violence Against Women Survey Allow for generalization
If the national surveys do not have measures you are interested in. If the national surveys do not have a large enough representation of a particular niche population one wants to study (e.g., students or same-sex partners).
Non-representative samples
People still argue over the validity of the CTS
Psychometrics consistently indicate that these scales accurately measure the behaviors they claim to measure. However, do these behaviors accurately reflect family violence as it is actually experienced?
Offer real-life policy implications Present complicated statistical analyses in ways understandable to policymakers.
Researcher training
Evaluation Issues
Researcher training, Statistical analyses, Qualitative research
Growing need for measures of psychological abuse and better conceptual understanding of what constitutes psychological abuse.
Some research suggests that it is as or more damaging than physical abuse. What is it? Threats or undermining self-esteem? If it includes the latter, at what point does criticism constitute psychological abuse? What about rejection? Encouraging antisocial behavior?
Bivariate vs. multivariate analyses -- assessing multiple risks factors and providing statistical control. Meta-analyses
Statistical analyses
Theoretical Approaches (interactional) can include
Victim blaming? Attachment disorder
among academics, there is also a diversity of approaches which vary by
*theory *methodology *disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches
Theoretical Approaches Alcohol and Drugs
Alcohol use is a strong predictor of family violence
Different types of academic researchers, advocates, research participants, policymakers, etc
Appreciating the different motivations of policymakers, advocates, and researchers; not being judgmental; and learning how to work together. All three play a valuable role in understanding and stopping family violence.
added two subscales to the original three (injury and sexual coercion) and better accounted for minor and severe degrees of violence.
CTS2
Theoretical Approaches (multidimensional theories)
Competition vs. integration
Ensure the safety of research participants, investigators, and mental-health workers. Obtain informed consent of all research subjects Guarantee confidentiality, and where possible anonymity Provide a full and honest disclosure of the research methodology and findings Implementing the legal duty to protect those endangered by violent subjects Displaying cultural competence and sensitivity
Ethical Issues
Assessing which interventions and treatments have a successful track-record in the scholarly literature
Evidence-based therapy
Strains Negative emotions crime
General Strain Theory
people who observed the family violence or had the family violence reported to them
Informant Data
assessment and research design issues
Lack of theoretical framework - variable analysis Example: poverty vs. social disorganization
The emotional response to a neutral stimulus after the repeated pairing of the neutral stimulus with a potent stimulus.
Learning Theories (Classical Conditioning)
Much laboratory research suggests that violence is modeled.
Learning Theories (Modeling)
Engaging in behaviors based on the rewards/punishments of that same behavior in the past.
Learning theories (operant conditioning)
finding ways to collect probability samples of niche populations.
Methodology:
informant data minimizes the _____ but introduces ____
Minimizes the reluctance to report but introduces threats to the validity
for the crime of family violence, you're pretty much looking at one negative emotion - anger.
Negative emotions
Clinical assessment: use of multiple measures to accurately assess problems and behaviors. Vicarious traumatization/burnout
Practice Issues
aggression, low self-esteem, and feelings of dependency, poor problem-solving skills, vulnerability, inadequacy, and loneliness.
Psychological traits
narcissism, antisocial personality disorder, clinical depression
Psychopathology (e.g., mental disorder)
Collaboration between different agencies and stakeholders throughout the research process
Research issues
blocked goals, removal of a positive stimuli, addition of a negative stimuli
Strains
Individual traits that predict perpetrating and being victimized
Theoretical Approaches (individual)
interactional dynamics between the perpetrator and victim are essential for understanding family violence - e.g., you can't have a perpetrator without a victim.
Theoretical Approaches (interactional)
classical conditioning is the basis for
Trauma Theory - e.g., PTSD and revictimization
Disseminate research through various forums
academic journals, websites, magazines, organizational newsletters, video materials and presentations for advocacy groups, and directly to policy makers.
advocates ( ) vs. academicians ( )
activists/experts
Importance of coping strategies to
assess strains and handle emotions
(likelihood of getting caught)
celerity
is the strongest predictor of deterrence
celerity
___ is more prevalent in neighborhoods containing social disorganization
crime
people are more likely to be deterred from committing a crime when
deterrence theory the celerity is greater, the severity of the punishment is greater , and the swiftness of the punishment is greater
While a lot of evidence supports this explanation, the majority of people with violent parents
do not go on to become abusers
CTS1 found early research that men and women
engaged equally in IPV./ Gender equivalence and methodological critiques of the CTS1
social disorganization includes a
function of poverty, residential transiency and ethnic heterogeneity
these behaviors often become
habitual or automatic
Poverty, residential transiency, and ethnic heterogeneityincreases social isolation and lack of collective efficacy increases blocked goals and strains increases negative emotionsincreases aggressionfamily violence.
leads to family violence
For example, people are more likely to engage in IPV when that behavior has consistently
led to compliance from a partner in the past
Memory recall Differential interpretation of question Biases: family vs. stranger, normative vs. non-normative, violence as a perpetrator vs. violence as a victim, men vs. women
limitations on self reports
Where behavioral norms are uncertain, we will
model the behavior of others - especially, legitimated authorities.
theoretical approach micro
modeling/classical conditioning
sources of data
official arrest statistics, self reports, informant data
CTS1 measured three types of conflict resolution during interpersonal disagreements:
reasoning and negotiation; verbal and symbolic aggression; and physical aggression.
social isolation and lack of collective efficacy
social disorganization
An integration of three approaches
social disorganization theory, general strain theory, and individual traits.
theoretical approaches (macro)
social disorganization/deterrence theory
disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches vary by ___, ___, and ____
theory methodology activist vs. expert orientation