Brownridge Douglas A
Department of Family Social Sciences at University of Manitoba.
Violence Against Women. 2008 Jul;14(7):809-32. doi: 10.1177/1077801208320368.
This study examined cohabiting women's elevated risk for male partner violence. It was predicted that an increased rate of cohabitation would be accompanied by a reduction in the bias toward selection into cohabitation and that this would result in greater similarity between characteristics of cohabiting and marital relationships as well as in their respective rates of violence. The results were generally consistent with this prediction. Cohabitation increased in Canada between 1993 and 2004, which appeared to have been reflected in some reduction in differences in selection and relationship variables as well as in lower rates of violence for cohabiting relative to married women. Nevertheless, persons who cohabited remained a select group and several relationship differences persisted. These selection and relationship differences accounted for the persistence of cohabiting women's elevated odds of violence in each survey. Results suggested that rates of violence in cohabiting and marital unions should eventually converge.
本研究调查了同居女性遭受男性伴侣暴力的风险增加情况。研究预测,同居率的上升将伴随着选择同居的偏差减少,这将导致同居关系和婚姻关系的特征以及各自的暴力发生率更加相似。结果总体上与这一预测一致。1993年至2004年间,加拿大的同居现象有所增加,这似乎反映在选择和关系变量的差异有所减少,以及同居女性相对于已婚女性的暴力发生率较低。然而,同居者仍然是一个特定的群体,一些关系差异仍然存在。这些选择和关系差异解释了每次调查中同居女性暴力几率持续升高的原因。结果表明,同居关系和婚姻关系中的暴力发生率最终应该会趋于一致。