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Journal Article

Citation

Cunningham SM. Violence Vict. 2003; 18(6): 619-639.

Affiliation

Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Center for Interdisciplinary and Special Studies, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA 01610, USA. scunningham@holycross.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15109117

Abstract

This article examines adult respondents' abuse of children as a consequence of their own childhood experiences of abuse, both direct experiences of childhood violence (hitting) and exposure to interparental violence (witnessing). In particular, the study examines the extent to which these factors function interactively: Are both experience and exposure necessary or is either sufficient to increase disproportionately the probability of child abuse? Using data from the Second National Family Violence Survey, results of a logistic regression analysis show that either or both factors produced higher than average and relatively similar rates of child abuse. Only respondents with neither form of family violence reported lower than average rates of abuse of their own children. The analysis controlled for gender, race, family income, and family structure; race was the only control variable to be significantly associated with child abuse. Finally, no control variable modified the interaction between the family violence variables.


Language: en

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