Calton Jenna M, Grossmann Jessica L, Cattaneo Lauren Bennett
1 George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2017 Dec;32(23):3577-3600. doi: 10.1177/0886260515600166. Epub 2015 Aug 17.
Many women with children experience intimate partner violence (IPV). These survivors are particularly important to assist, because countless have complex safety concerns related to their children. Mothers' concerns about their children have been shown to impact their decision making related to abuse, but researchers have not closely explored what happens during mothers' interactions with help sources. This study examined whether women with (n = 98) and without (n = 44) children differ in a) their court experiences through their perceptions of procedural and distributive justice, and b) the context of their lives surrounding the court experience. We also explored the relationship between contextual factors and procedural and distributive justice. Results indicate participants were relatively satisfied with their court experiences, despite experiencing reabuse, danger, and fear throughout court processes. Mothers reported significantly higher levels of distributive justice and contact with the abusive partner than non-mothers. However, mothers did not differ significantly from non-mothers with regard to procedural justice, fear, danger, reabuse or reliance on the abusive partner. Results of multiple regression analyses indicated the interaction between fear and motherhood significantly predicted participants' perceptions of distributive justice, as did the interaction between danger and motherhood. In these interactions, mothers' fear and perceptions of danger were not related to their perception of distributive justice. However, non-mothers who reported higher levels of fear and danger perceived less distributive justice. Results suggest mothers and non-mothers enter the system with similar life contexts, and that these contextual factors impact their perceptions of court outcomes differently.
许多有孩子的女性遭受亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)。帮助这些幸存者尤为重要,因为无数人在孩子方面存在复杂的安全担忧。母亲对孩子的担忧已被证明会影响她们在虐待问题上的决策,但研究人员尚未深入探讨母亲与求助渠道互动时会发生什么。本研究考察了有孩子(n = 98)和没有孩子(n = 44)的女性在以下方面是否存在差异:a)她们通过对程序正义和分配正义的认知所获得的法庭体验;b)围绕法庭体验的生活背景。我们还探讨了背景因素与程序正义和分配正义之间的关系。结果表明,尽管在整个法庭程序中经历了再次虐待、危险和恐惧,但参与者对她们的法庭体验相对满意。母亲报告的分配正义水平和与虐待伴侣的接触程度显著高于非母亲。然而,在程序正义、恐惧、危险、再次虐待或对虐待伴侣的依赖方面,母亲与非母亲没有显著差异。多元回归分析结果表明,恐惧与母亲身份之间的相互作用以及危险与母亲身份之间的相互作用均显著预测了参与者对分配正义的认知。在这些相互作用中,母亲的恐惧和对危险的认知与她们对分配正义的认知无关。然而,报告恐惧和危险程度较高的非母亲对分配正义的认知较低。结果表明,母亲和非母亲进入该系统时生活背景相似,且这些背景因素对她们对法庭结果的认知影响不同。