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Journal Article

Citation

Rosen LN, Parmley AM, Knudson KH, Fancher P. Violence Vict. 2002; 17(5): 607-622.

Affiliation

National Institute of Justice, Washington, DC 20531, USA. rosen1@ojp.usdoj.gov

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12477101

Abstract

Correlates of self-reported intimate partner violence (IPV) were examined among 488 married male U.S. Army soldiers. Study results were examined within the framework of Johnson's (1995) typology, which proposes that there are two main types of IPV, common couple violence and intimate terrorism. We predicted that poor marital adjustment would be associated with minor violence, hypothesized to be indicative of common couple violence. We also predicted that psychological and behavioral characteristics associated with perpetrators of IPV would be more strongly correlated with severe inflicted aggression--a pattern hypothesized to be indicative of intimate terrorism. The results, based on a multivariate analysis of covariance, generally supported our hypotheses. Furthermore, the higher levels of IPV reported by Black respondents in this study were associated with the pattern hypothesized to be characteristic of common couple violence.


Language: en

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