Reprint

Intimate Partner Violence: Risk and Vulnerability Factors, Health Promotion and Prevention in Educational and Healthcare Contexts

Edited by
December 2023
162 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9522-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9523-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Intimate Partner Violence: Risk and Vulnerability Factors, Health Promotion and Prevention in Educational and Healthcare Contexts that was published in

Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

Violence between couples is one of the most common forms of abuse. The consequences that this phenomenon has on the victims, but also on the aggressors, are serious enough to justify the multiple investigations focused on the topic. In the literature, a strong heterogeneity of variables has been linked to this phenomenon (previous history of abuse, sexism, normalization of violence, culture, etc.) in different ways. In the same way, considering violence within the LGTBI+ community, the reviewed literature concludes that intimate partner violence does not entail forms of abuse specifically linked to these couples, since aggressions are manifested in hetero- and homosexual couples regardless of their sexual orientation. This heterogeneity of variables linked with the phenomenon can be assumed to have a positive impact on the prevention of abuse; however, to date, the actions taken have not been sufficient. There is thus a need to adopt a broader approach that includes not only all the social agents involved but also how the world and society are constantly evolving, changing how violence and abuse are perpetrated and interpreted.In view of the above, this reprint presents ten valuable investigations carried out by researchers of international prestige focused on different contexts, social agents, and the way victims are affected by the variables linked to the phenomenon, indicating how they interact and modify the way teens see romantic relationships and violence.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
teen dating violence; male victimization; female victimization; moral disengagement; sexism; adolescent and young couple violence; homosexual couples; heterosexual couples; violent victimization; perception of abuse; marital dissatisfaction; intimate partner violence; self-esteem; coping; gender roles; transgender; gender-diverse; sexual violence; gender expression; avoidance behavior; quality of life; GHQ-12; risk factors; victims of violence; chronic pain; health; scoping review; behavioral sensitivity; emotional intelligence; violence in young couples; female same-sex couples; violence; risks factors; scoping review; domestic violence; primary healthcare; general practitioners; female victims; nurses; midwives; sexual violence; intimate partner violence; gay; bisexual; transsexual; victimization; Spain; child welfare; intimate partner violence; healthcare; policy