University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Apr;37(7-8):NP5774-NP5804. doi: 10.1177/0886260520962075. Epub 2020 Sep 25.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) impacts career development and negatively influences employment prospects, education attainment, and financial earnings; yet there is a gap in research exploring the experiences of employment-seeking from the perspectives of survivors. An intersectional and social ecological perspective provides an important framework and highlights the multiple intersecting barriers of IPV and employment ranging from mental health concerns such as trauma, anxiety and depression to lack of shelter and childcare, limited access to employment services, and other forms of discrimination. This article responds to this gap in research and provides findings from a constructivist grounded theory study of 16 employment-seeking survivors of IPV. To theorize and understand IPV and employment utilizing an intersectional and social ecological framework, the following research question were addressed: (a) What are the contextual barriers or facilitators that shape the employment-seeking process of survivors of IPV? (b) How do the experiences of discrimination shape the employment-seeking experience of survivors of IPV? (c) What employment services were helpful or unhelpful during the employment-seeking process? Two main themes emerged from analysis: (a) Multilevel barriers to employment and (b) Employment barriers/facilitators to employment-seeking. Findings indicate that survivors of IPV face multiple barriers to employment at the intrapersonal (e.g., depression, anxiety, trauma, low self-esteem), interpersonal (e.g., ties to an abusive partner, responsibilities related to childcare), community (lack of social support, few employment opportunities, poverty), and structural/institutionalized levels (e.g., racism, sexism, transphobia). Implications from these findings illustrate that employment-seeking is shaped by structural inequities, intersecting stigma, individual level barriers, and social identities, as well as experience of abuse, which is an important contribution to IPV research. This study provides insight into the complexities of employment-seeking and helps improve knowledge on the social ecological and intersecting barriers of employment from the perspectives of survivors.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)会影响职业发展,并对就业前景、教育程度和经济收入产生负面影响;然而,从幸存者的角度探索就业经历的研究还存在差距。交叉和社会生态视角提供了一个重要的框架,并强调了 IPV 和就业之间的多种交叉障碍,从心理健康问题(如创伤、焦虑和抑郁)到缺乏住所和儿童保育、有限的就业服务机会以及其他形式的歧视。本文针对这一研究空白,提供了一项关于 16 名 IPV 幸存者就业的建构主义扎根理论研究的结果。为了利用交叉和社会生态框架来理论化和理解 IPV 和就业,提出了以下研究问题:(a) 是什么样的背景障碍或促进因素塑造了 IPV 幸存者的就业过程?(b) 歧视经历如何塑造 IPV 幸存者的就业寻求经历?(c) 在就业寻求过程中,哪些就业服务是有帮助的,哪些是没有帮助的?分析产生了两个主要主题:(a) 就业的多层次障碍和(b) 就业寻求的就业障碍/促进因素。研究结果表明,IPV 幸存者在个人层面(例如,抑郁、焦虑、创伤、自尊心低)、人际层面(例如,与虐待伴侣的关系、与儿童保育相关的责任)、社区层面(缺乏社会支持、就业机会少、贫困)和结构/制度化层面(例如,种族主义、性别歧视、跨性别恐惧症)面临着多种就业障碍。这些发现的意义表明,就业寻求受到结构性不平等、交叉污名、个人层面障碍和社会身份以及虐待经历的影响,这是对 IPV 研究的重要贡献。本研究深入了解了就业寻求的复杂性,并有助于从幸存者的角度提高对就业的社会生态和交叉障碍的认识。