Sowan-Basheer Wafaa, Winstok Zeev
University of Haifa, Israel.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Mar;37(5-6):2581-2597. doi: 10.1177/0886260520935493. Epub 2020 Jul 13.
This study aimed to examine differences between men and women and between Muslims, secular Jews, and religious Jews in their motivations for using sanctions within their intimate relationships. This work involved heterosexual couples from the general population. The sample included 95 Muslim, 68 secular Jewish, and 70 ultra-orthodox Jewish couples (466 participants). The findings of the study show that sanction use during times of conflict is prevalent among the vast majority of couples. Motivations for the use of sanctions are stronger among women than men. In addition, the strongest motivation expressed by both genders was a motivation for conflict resolution. This is the first time that sanctions, as a tactic to cope with conflict, have been addressed in a scholarly manner. This study provides a preliminary estimate of how commonly these types of behaviors are used in intimate relationships. Theoretical and empirical implications of the theoretical framework and the findings are discussed, including the role of the use of sanction in the escalation of intimate partner conflicts.
本研究旨在考察男性与女性之间,以及穆斯林、世俗犹太人、宗教犹太人在亲密关系中使用制裁手段的动机差异。这项工作涉及来自普通人群的异性恋伴侣。样本包括95对穆斯林伴侣、68对世俗犹太伴侣和70对极端正统犹太伴侣(466名参与者)。研究结果表明,在绝大多数伴侣中,冲突期间使用制裁手段的情况很普遍。女性使用制裁手段的动机比男性更强。此外,两性表达的最强烈动机是解决冲突的动机。这是首次以学术方式探讨制裁作为应对冲突策略的情况。本研究对这类行为在亲密关系中的普遍使用情况进行了初步估计。讨论了理论框架和研究结果的理论及实证意义,包括制裁手段的使用在亲密伴侣冲突升级中的作用。