The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
The Royal Women's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
J Interpers Violence. 2021 Dec;36(23-24):11704-11727. doi: 10.1177/0886260519900298. Epub 2020 Jan 20.
Intimate partner sexual violence (IPSV) is a common yet hidden form of violence against women. It encompasses a range of behaviors, including rape and sexual assault, and also more subtle behaviors such as the use of coercion and blackmail to obtain sex. It is typically described as an aspect of intimate partner violence, yet, although it often co-occurs with physical or psychological abuse, the contextual factors and nuances of sexual violence perpetrated by an intimate partner are likely to be very different. IPSV also differs greatly from sexual assault perpetrated by a stranger or other known person. Despite this, ecological theories and models developed to help understand and prevent violence against women have neglected or excluded IPSV. This is problematic given the serious mental and physical health problems consistently associated with it. In response, this article aims to explore the ecological factors that may be associated with IPSV at the individual, relationship, community, and societal levels. It draws on both inductive and deductive thematic analysis of = 38 in-depth, unstructured interviews with women victim/survivors. Individual-level factors included sexual inexperience and past trauma (for victims), and fragile masculinity and a sense of entitlement to sex (for perpetrators). Relationship-level factors included a large age gap in the relationship and co-occurring psychological abuse. Community-level factors were identified as failure to talk about sex, isolation, and lack of support, while societal-level factors included the idea that sex is a woman's duty in a relationship, and that "real rape" is perpetrated by strangers. These factors are incorporated into a proposed ecological model that is unique to IPSV, furthering our understanding of this complex problem and its areas of overlap and difference with intimate partner violence and sexual violence. With refinement and testing through large-scale quantitative studies, this model may be critical in guiding future prevention efforts.
亲密伴侣性暴力(IPSV)是一种常见但隐藏的针对女性的暴力形式。它包括一系列行为,包括强奸和性侵犯,以及更微妙的行为,如使用胁迫和勒索来获得性。它通常被描述为亲密伴侣暴力的一个方面,然而,尽管它经常与身体或心理虐待同时发生,但亲密伴侣实施的性暴力的背景因素和细微差别可能非常不同。IPSV 也与陌生人或其他熟人实施的性侵犯有很大的不同。尽管如此,为了帮助理解和预防针对妇女的暴力而开发的生态理论和模型忽视或排除了 IPSV。鉴于与性暴力相关的严重身心健康问题,这是有问题的。有鉴于此,本文旨在探讨与个人、关系、社区和社会各级 IPSV 相关的生态因素。它借鉴了对 38 名女性受害者/幸存者进行的深入、非结构化访谈的归纳和演绎主题分析。个人层面的因素包括性经验不足和过去的创伤(对受害者而言),以及脆弱的男子气概和对性的应有权利感(对施害者而言)。关系层面的因素包括关系中年龄差距大以及同时存在的心理虐待。社区层面的因素被确定为未能谈论性、孤立和缺乏支持,而社会层面的因素包括性是女性在关系中的责任的观念,以及“真正的强奸”是由陌生人实施的。这些因素被纳入一个独特的 IPSV 生态模型中,进一步加深了我们对这一复杂问题及其与亲密伴侣暴力和性暴力的重叠和差异领域的理解。通过大规模的定量研究进行细化和测试,该模型可能对指导未来的预防工作至关重要。