NCJ Number
250526
Date Published
July 2016
Length
2 pages
Annotation
This article reports on research funded by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) that examined follow-up issues related to the study entitled Dating Violence Among Latino Adolescents (DAVILA).
Abstract
The current study found that among students who experienced dating violence in the initial study, dating violence was likely to be a repeated event. Also, as the number of romantic relationships a teen had experienced increased, the risk of being a victim of dating violence also increased. In addition, teens who experienced dating violence in the first study reported feeling less connection with their schools in the follow-up study. Further, teens who did not experience dating violence in the first study and who had strong social-support networks were less likely to experience dating violence in the follow-up study. The follow-up study also found that teens who lived with other children in the household had a lower risk for experiencing dating violence. Cultural identity was not found to affect dating violence victimization in the follow-up study. The implications of these findings for policy and practice are discussed.
Date Published: July 1, 2016
Downloads
Similar Publications
- A Reflective Spectroscopy and Mineralogical Investigation of Cosmetic Blush (Wet‘N’Wild) Potentially for Forensic Investigations Related to Interpersonal Violence—An Experimental Feasibility Study
- A Review of the Evolution of the NCS-NCVS Police Reporting and Response Questions and Their Application to Older Women Experiencing Violent Victimization
- Population-level Effects on Crime of Recovering Firearms from Armed Prohibited Persons: Intention-to-treat Analysis of a Pragmatic Cluster-randomised Trial in California Cities