Community-based Norms About Intimate Partner Violence: Putting Attributions of Fault and Responsibility into Context |
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Authors: | Catherine A. Taylor Susan B. Sorenson |
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Affiliation: | (1) Columbia University School of Social Work, New York;(2) Department of Community Health Sciences, UCLA School of Public Health, USA;(3) Tulane School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine, 1440 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA, 70112 |
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Abstract: | Fault and responsibility are key concepts in understanding how victims and assailants are, or are not, held accountable by society. We used a fractional factorial vignette design with a community-residing sample of 3,679 adults to examine judgments about intimate partner violence (IPV). Although fault, or causal responsibility, was assigned most often to assailants (69%), respondents assigned solution responsibility most often to both persons (52%) or to the victim alone (31%): interpersonal communication for couples (38%) and self-protective actions for victims (i.e., engaging formal authorities [12%] and/or leaving the assailant [11%]) were the most frequent suggestions. Potential injury to the victim and gender/relationship-based norms had the greatest impact on judgments. Findings may inform strategies to alter social norms regarding IPV. An erratum to this article is available at . |
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Keywords: | social norms intimate partner violence fault responsibility solution |
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