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Journal Article

Citation

Wallace S, Wallace C, Kenkre J, Brayford J, Borja S. Partner Abuse 2019; 10(2): 243-261.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Springer Publishing)

DOI

10.1891/1946-6560.10.2.243

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study determines the needs of men experiencing domestic abuse from an intimate partner. In-depth interviews with 6 men who sought support are analyzed using interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA). Four master themes (interpreted as needs) are identified from analysis, "recognition" (of male victims and the impact), "safety," "accepting domestic abuse," and "rebuilding." A need for recognition is identified as the dominant theme influencing the capacity for the 3 remaining needs to be met. Domestic abuse is generally understood to be a gendered, heteronormative experience. Abused men are not acknowledged as "typical" victims. The lack of recognition prevented participants from accepting and recognizing their victimization resulting in delayed help-seeking and prolonged abuse. A joint commitment is required from policy and practice to raise the profile of abused men, challenge wider society's prevailing norms, and embed equal status for all victims.


Language: en

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