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Showing posts from January, 2020

Coercive control

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2787019?seq=1 "This research examines gender as status, and gender and control (which share the meaning of dominance) as identities by analyzing negative and positive behavior of married couples whose task is to resolve disagreements in their marriage.  On the basis of recent extensions of expectation states theory dealing with emotion-based behavior, we hypothesize that husbands will be more likely than wives to use negative behavior in conversation. On the basis of identity theory and the meanings of emotion-based behavior, we also hypothesize that those with a more masculine and more dominant control identity will be moe likely to use negative behavior in interaction, and that those with a more feminine and less dominant control identity will be more likely to use positive behavior.  We test these predictions on a representative sample of newly married couples, using videotaped conversations. Although the results are consistent with prediction

Women and men's use of coercive control in intimate partner violence

"Coercive control was associated with IPV, and this relationship was similar for men and women across the three samples. In fact, coercive control was predominantly reciprocal in nature, with women and men reporting both receiving and perpetrating controlling behaviors." https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21780535

Psychology Today - attitudes towards men as victims of IPV

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/talking-about-men/201911/domestic-violence-against-men-no-laughing-matter

Men's Experience of Domestic Violence, by Dr Liz Bates, Dept of Psychology, University of Cumbria.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmWQye77F70