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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Marriage and Family

Journal of Marriage and Family

Volume 64 Issue 4, Pages 851 - 863

Published Online: 19 Feb 2004

Copyright © National Council on Family Relations, 2010



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Perpetrator or Victim? Relationships Between Intimate Partner Violence and Well-Being
Kristin L. Anderson 1
  1 Department of Sociology, Arntzen Hall 529, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9081 (Kristin.Anderson@wwu.edu).
Copyright 2002 National Council on Family Relations
KEYWORDS
depression • gender • intimate partner violence • self-esteem • substance abuse

ABSTRACT

In national surveys, around half of intimate partner violence perpetrators are also victims of partner assaults. However, data on intimate partner violence victimization and perpetration are rarely examined together. This study examines the relationships between perpetration, victimization, and three psychosocial variables—depression, self-esteem, and substance abuse—that have been constructed in prior research as both causes and consequences of partner violence. Results indicate that associations between substance abuse and self-esteem and partner violence perpetration are mediated by controlling for victimization, but depression is associated with both victimization and perpetration. Associations between mutual violence and depression and substance abuse are greater among women than men, supporting the position that gender symmetry in reported violence perpetration does not imply symmetry in outcomes.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1741-3737.2002.00851.x About DOI

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