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亲密伴侣暴力和交叉身份如何在环境背景下汇聚影响妇女的性健康。

How Intimate Partner Violence and Intersectional Identities Converge to Influence Women's Sexual Health across Environmental Contexts.

机构信息

School of Social Welfare, University of Kansas, Lawrence.

出版信息

Soc Work. 2020 Oct 10;65(4):349-357. doi: 10.1093/sw/swaa031.

Abstract

In this qualitative study, authors examine women's sexual risk and protective factors based on their experiences of intimate partner violence (IPV) and positioning within society relative to power. This analysis examines sexual risk and protective factors across intersectional identities-including gender, race, socioeconomic conditions, and age-among women survivors of IPV. The sample (N = 28) included women of diverse ages (range = 22-60 years) and races (57 percent White, 14 percent African American, 11 percent Hispanic, 7 percent Native American, 7 percent multiracial, and 4 percent South Asian). Findings demonstrated that IPV experiences differentially affect women's sexual health according to intersectional identities and across various levels of environmental context by influencing the (in)stability of their lives and their experiences of (dis)empowerment. This analysis offers a nuanced understanding of how social workers can support women in planning for their own sexual health and safety and shows how an intersectional feminist framework enriches our understanding of the grand challenge to "build healthy relationships to end violence."

摘要

在这项定性研究中,作者根据女性的亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)经历以及相对于权力的社会定位,研究了女性的性风险和保护因素。本分析考察了 IPV 幸存者中跨交叉身份(包括性别、种族、社会经济状况和年龄)的性风险和保护因素。该样本(N=28)包括不同年龄(范围为 22-60 岁)和种族(57%为白人,14%为非裔美国人,11%为西班牙裔,7%为美洲原住民,7%为多种族,4%为南亚裔)的女性。研究结果表明,根据交叉身份和不同层次的环境背景,IPV 经历会对女性的性健康产生不同的影响,从而影响她们生活的(不)稳定性和(失)赋权体验。该分析深入了解了社会工作者如何支持女性规划自己的性健康和安全,并展示了交叉女权主义框架如何丰富我们对“建立健康关系以结束暴力”这一重大挑战的理解。

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