Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12978
Record ID: b10b1b3b-6a4b-45c3-9e7a-ad09777a4141
Type: Journal Article
Title: "When you're involved, it's just different": making sense of domestic violence
Other Titles: Violence against women
Authors: Berns, Nancy
Schweingruber, David
Keywords: Community attitudes;Overview
Year: 2007
Publisher: Sage Publications
Citation: 13 (3), March 2007
Notes:  This article explores how people make sense of domestic violence. The authors argue that it is easier to make sense of other people's problems than your own. If people are trying to understand a social problem with which they are personally involved, they are likely to engage in interpretive work that connects their own experiences with the problem and with a possible troubled identity. However, the person not involved in the social problem does not have the additional troubled identity construction occurring. This process of evaluating claims and constructing different narratives of the self and the social problem helps explain the differences between victims' and nonvictims' understandings of social issues. [?2007 SAGE Publications. All rights reserved. For further information, visit SAGE Publications link.]
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/12978
ISSN: 1077-8012
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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