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Journal Article

Citation

Vass A, Haj-Yahia MM. Child. Youth Serv. Rev. 2020; 108: e104670.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.childyouth.2019.104670

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background
Shelters for battered women (SBW) are one of the main resources protecting battered women and their children from immediate threat, but the time the women can spend at the SBW is limited. Women and their children must leave the shelter when circumstances make it possible and rebuild their lives outside of it. To date, there has been a dearth of research examining how children perceive the transition from the SBW to the community and rebuild new personal and family routines.

Objective
The present study explores the subjective perceptions of children of battered women of their transition from the SBW to the community.
Participants
Thirty-two children (18 boys, and 14 girls) from Israel, who had resided in one of four SBWs, participated in the study.

Methods
We used a qualitative, naturalistic approach, aimed at documenting children's subjective perceptions. The dataset was analyzed inductively, following the six stages of thematic analysis.

Results
Three main themes emerged regarding the children's experiences: (a) escape from the shelter versus leaving after preparation: the process of leaving the shelter; (b) types of living arrangements after leaving the shelter; and (c) implications of reestablishing the social network at school. Although some of the children evaluated their lived experiences after leaving the shelter positively, most of them reported mixed or negative experiences.

Conclusions
The experiences of the children after leaving the shelter and their meanings back to the community are discussed. The implications of their experiences for theory development and future research, as well as for developing interventions, focusing on the children's individual needs, when they return to live in the community are also discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

Children exposed to IPV; Children of battered women; Intimate partner violence (IPV); Shelters for battered women

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