Eriksen Shelley, Jensen Vickie
Departments of Human Development, California State University, Long Beach, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2009 Jan;24(1):183-208. doi: 10.1177/0886260508316298. Epub 2008 Apr 16.
Sibling violence is the most prevalent and least studied form of family violence, and little research has examined differences based on severity. This research examines more severe versus less severe forms of sibling violence. Using a subsample of married couples with two or more children ages 0 to 17 drawn from the 1976 National Survey of Physical Violence in American Families, the authors employ Conflict Tactics Scale items for child-to-child conflict to construct a measure of sibling violence severity. Drawing from several theoretical perspectives on family violence and peer aggression, the authors analyze the impact of macro-system variables, family stress and resources, and family subsystems on less severe and more severe sibling violence. Contextual factors are most important in explaining less severe sibling violence. Experience of parental violence and unpredictability are individual factors relevant to severe sibling violence. More research is needed to examine the etiology and impact of different forms of sibling violence.
同胞间暴力是家庭暴力中最普遍且研究最少的形式,很少有研究考察基于严重程度的差异。本研究考察了同胞间暴力的严重形式与不太严重的形式。作者使用从1976年美国全国家庭身体暴力调查中抽取的有两个或更多0至17岁孩子的已婚夫妇子样本,采用儿童间冲突的冲突策略量表项目来构建同胞间暴力严重程度的衡量指标。作者从关于家庭暴力和同伴攻击的几个理论视角出发,分析宏观系统变量、家庭压力和资源以及家庭子系统对不太严重和更严重的同胞间暴力的影响。情境因素在解释不太严重的同胞间暴力方面最为重要。遭受父母暴力的经历和不可预测性是与严重同胞间暴力相关的个体因素。需要更多研究来考察不同形式的同胞间暴力的病因及影响。