The University of Illinois at Chicago, USA.
Independent Scholar.
J Interpers Violence. 2021 Jul;36(13-14):6797-6820. doi: 10.1177/0886260518820705. Epub 2019 Jan 2.
Although men make up a large majority of the U.S. incarcerated population, in recent years, incarceration rates have increased faster for women. As a result, scholarship has increasingly sought to hone in on the causes and correlates of women's criminal behavior and criminal justice involvement. One factor that has been consistently found to be associated with criminal behavior and criminal justice involvement is exposure to intimate partner violence. This existing scholarship has largely focused on physical and sexual abuse and has not examined whether exposure to multiple types of abuse places women at a particularly great risk for criminal justice involvement. In this study, we begin to address these gaps by examining two questions: (a) is there an independent association between different types of intimate partner violence (physical, sexual, emotional, and economic) and a mother's risk of experiencing criminal justice involvement; and (b) is the exposure to multiple types of intimate partner violence particularly detrimental to mothers? To address these questions, we use longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study and logistic regression models. First, we find evidence that mothers who have experienced any abuse type are at greater risk of criminal justice involvement. Second, once co-occurrence of abuse types is accounted for, only physical and economic abuse are independently associated with a greater risk of criminal justice involvement. Third, we find that being exposed to multiple types of intimate partner violence places women at particularly great risk for criminal justice involvement. These findings point to the need for criminal justice actors to take intimate partner violence into account when they are making decisions that impact women. These results also highlight the importance of legal advocacy for domestic violence counselors in their work with women.
虽然男性在美国被监禁人口中占绝大多数,但近年来,女性的监禁率增长更快。因此,学术界越来越关注女性犯罪行为和刑事司法参与的原因和相关因素。一个与犯罪行为和刑事司法参与一直相关的因素是亲密伴侣暴力的暴露。这一现有研究主要集中在身体和性虐待上,没有研究暴露于多种类型的虐待是否会使女性特别容易卷入刑事司法。在这项研究中,我们通过研究两个问题开始解决这些差距:(a)不同类型的亲密伴侣暴力(身体、性、情感和经济)与母亲经历刑事司法参与的风险之间是否存在独立关联;以及(b)接触多种类型的亲密伴侣暴力对母亲是否特别不利?为了解决这些问题,我们使用了脆弱家庭和儿童福利研究的纵向数据和逻辑回归模型。首先,我们发现有证据表明,经历过任何一种虐待类型的母亲更有可能卷入刑事司法。其次,一旦考虑到虐待类型的同时发生,只有身体和经济虐待与更大的刑事司法参与风险独立相关。第三,我们发现接触多种类型的亲密伴侣暴力会使女性特别容易卷入刑事司法。这些发现表明,刑事司法行为者在做出影响女性的决策时,需要考虑亲密伴侣暴力。这些结果还强调了家庭暴力顾问在为女性提供服务时进行法律宣传的重要性。