Fox Jessica
Centre for Justice, Faculty of Creative Industries, Education and Social Justice, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Autism Adulthood. 2025 May 28;7(3):249-260. doi: 10.1089/aut.2023.0100. eCollection 2025 Jun.
The social factors that impact autistic women's vulnerability to interpersonal violence are underexplored within research about their experiences. The current literature review examines research about the experience of interpersonal violence for autistic women to develop a better understanding of the social factors that underpin this issue. Autistic women experience social exclusion and inequality in connection to their intersectional position as both a gender and neuro-minority group. This intersectional disadvantage contributes to the elevated rate of interpersonal violence that autistic women experience. Autistic women experience gendered forms of interpersonal violence, which are connected to inequality in accessing appropriate supports and the detrimental impacts of masking. Autistic women also face intersectional stigma associated with being both autistic and victim-survivors of interpersonal violence, which is a significant barrier to their engagement with support services. The issue of interpersonal violence and the intersectional factors that underpin this for autistic women should therefore be approached as a complex social issue rather than one of individual vulnerability.
在关于自闭症女性经历的研究中,影响她们易遭受人际暴力的社会因素尚未得到充分探索。当前的文献综述审视了关于自闭症女性人际暴力经历的研究,以便更好地理解支撑这一问题的社会因素。自闭症女性作为性别和神经少数群体,因其交叉性身份而经历社会排斥和不平等。这种交叉性劣势导致自闭症女性遭受人际暴力的比率升高。自闭症女性经历性别化形式的人际暴力,这与获得适当支持方面的不平等以及伪装的有害影响有关。自闭症女性还面临与既是自闭症患者又是人际暴力受害者幸存者相关的交叉性污名,这是她们获得支持服务的重大障碍。因此,人际暴力问题以及支撑自闭症女性这一问题的交叉性因素应被视为一个复杂的社会问题,而非个人脆弱性问题。