Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/17408
Record ID: 778a1f91-5ae0-471b-af18-48da37267f41
Web resource: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0886260517696869
Type: Journal Article
Title: Warning signs of partner abuse in intimate relationships : gender differences in young adults' perceptions of seriousness
Authors: Frey, Ron
Towler, Anna
Eivers, Areana
Keywords: Social attitudes;Intimate partner violence;Gender;Dating violence;Surveys;Youth
Year: 2020
Publisher: Sage journals
Citation: Advance online publication, 28 March 2017
Abstract:  In response to the high rates of intimate partner abuse (IPA) among young adults and related negative health effects, this study examined 18- to 26-year-old Australians’ perceptions of unhealthy partner behaviors that may constitute early warning signs of abuse in intimate relationships. This research is the first to examine gender differences on this issue in a young adult population. A convenience sample of 49 males and 152 females (N = 201) completed an online survey, rating how seriously they viewed a list of partner warning sign behaviors (WSBs). WSBs consisted of three subscales: Dominance-Possessiveness, Denigration, and Conflict-Retaliation. Participants’ perceived seriousness of WSBs was analyzed by gender and WSB type. Results revealed large and significant gender differences in perceptions of WSBs, with females likely to rate all WSBs more seriously than males. Furthermore, females’ responses were negatively skewed and leptokurtotic indicating high levels of convergence in the view that such behaviors are a concern. Analysis by WSB type revealed that conflict-retaliation behaviors were perceived most seriously by both genders, with more than half of males and 67% of females rating these as very serious. In contrast, significantly lower levels of perceived seriousness were observed for denigration and dominance-possessiveness behaviors. Half to two thirds of females viewed dominance-possessiveness and denigration WSBs as very serious, respectively, whereas just one third of males endorsed both these WSB types as very serious. Findings reveal that females have a heightened awareness of the subtle warning signs of abuse in intimate relationships and that as partner WSBs become more overt, both genders are more likely to recognize them as serious. Findings also indicate that subtler WSBs, such as control and denigration, are less readily identified as unhealthy, particularly among males.

Keywords: intimate partner abuse, warning signs, young adults, gender differences, domestic violence, perceptions of domestic violence
URI: https://anrows.intersearch.com.au/anrowsjspui/handle/1/17408
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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