Does the inclusion criterion of women's aggression as opposed to their victimization result in samples that differ on key dimensions of intimate partner violence?

Violence Against Women
Tami P SullivanDavid L Snow

Abstract

This study is among the first attempts to address a frequently articulated, yet unsubstantiated claim that sample inclusion criteria based on women's physical aggression or victimization will yield different distributions of severity and type of partner violence and injury. Independent samples of African American women participated in separate studies based on either inclusion criterion of women's physical aggression or victimization. Between-groups comparisons showed that samples did not differ in physical, sexual, or psychological aggression; physical, sexual, or psychological victimization; inflicted or sustained injury. Therefore, inclusion criterion based on physical aggression or victimization did not yield unique samples of "aggressors" and "victims."

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Citations

May 6, 2015·Emergency Medicine Australasia : EMA·Simon SawyerBrett Williams
Jul 15, 2015·BMC Public Health·Dominique A CadilhacAnne Magnus
Oct 12, 2012·Journal of Sex Research·Lylla Cysne Frota D'AbreuMarina Rezende Bazon
Feb 26, 2016·Trauma, Violence & Abuse·Lisa FedinaBethany L Backes
Dec 20, 2014·Journal of Interpersonal Violence·William F FlackEmily J Heller
Feb 4, 2014·Trauma, Violence & Abuse·Callie Marie Rennison, Lynn A Addington
Jan 11, 2014·Journal of Interpersonal Violence·Jeffrey A Bouffard, Holly A Miller
Jul 24, 2013·Trauma, Violence & Abuse·Cory A CraneAndrea H Weinberger
Jun 7, 2019·The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse·Cory A CraneKathleen E Miller
Dec 11, 2020·Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services·Shiva BigizadehSafieh Jamali

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