NCJ Number
253397
Date Published
2018
Length
9 pages
Annotation
This study examined bidirectional associations between the acceptability of intimate partner violence (IPV) and the perpetration of IPV from adolescence into young adulthood.
Abstract
Beliefs about the acceptability of intimate partner violence (IPV) are associated with the perpetration of IPV among adolescents; however, minimal research has examined whether this association persists across time or whether there is a bidirectional association between acceptability of IPV and the perpetration of IPV. A sample of diverse high school students (N = 1,042; 56 percent female) from the Southwestern United States was assessed each year for 6 consecutive years. At each assessment, participants completed measures of the acceptability of IPV and psychological and physical IPV perpetration. The mean age of the sample at the first assessment was 15.09 years (SD = 0.79). Results: Structural equation modeling demonstrated that acceptability of male-to-female IPV and acceptability of female-to-male IPV were not consistent predictors of one's own IPV perpetration over time. In addition, minimal evidence was found for a bidirectional association between acceptability of IPV and one's own IPV perpetration over time. Moreover, minimal sex differences were evident and there were no differences based on race/ethnicity. The study overall conclusion is that despite the stability of beliefs about the acceptability of IPV over time from adolescence to young adulthood, findings suggest that acceptability of IPV is not a robust predictor of one's own IPV perpetration during this developmental period. The implications of targeting beliefs about IPV in prevention and intervention programs are discussed. (publisher abstract modified)
Date Published: January 1, 2018
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Accuracy and Characteristics of 2012 Honda Event Data Recorders from Real-Time Replay of Controller Area Network (CAN) Traffic
- Trends in composition, collection, persistence, and analysis of IGSR and OGSR: A review
- Remarks By James K Stewart to the New England Council on Crime and Delinquency Prevention, Narragansett, Rhode Island, September 25, 1985