Dobash y Dobash - Womens Violence To Men
Dobash y Dobash - Womens Violence To Men
Dobash y Dobash - Womens Violence To Men
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British Journal of Criminology 44(3) the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies (ISTD) 2004; all rights reserved
are its perpetrators. Worldwide, legislators, policy makers and advocates have developed responses
that conceive of the problem as primarily one of mens violence to women, and these findings provide support for such efforts and suggest that the current general direction of public policy and
expenditure is appropriate.
Introduction
Violence against women by an intimate male partner is now recognized throughout
most of the world as a significant social problem. It has been identified by many countries, the United Nations and the European Union as an issue of human rights (United
Nations 1995; Kelly 1997; Journal of Violence against Women (JrVAW) 2001). In the
past two decades, significant changes in policies and practices have occurred worldwide, but particularly in the United States, Britain, Canada and Australia (Dobash and
Dobash 1979; 1992; Schechter 1982; Heise 1994; Stubbs 1994; Mullender 1996; JrVAW
2001; Schneider 2002). The majority of changes have been in the areas of community
support, public policy, social services and civil and criminal law and law enforcement.
On a daily basis, police, hospital emergency services, social services and voluntary
organizations struggle with questions about how best to help victims who seek assistance because of violent episodes. Their focus is on injuries, homelessness, dislocation
of children from their homes and schools, emotional stress and a raft of other problems experienced by the women who seek assistance for themselves and their children.
Almost all pragmatic interventions in the form of emergency services, programmes and
other responses are primarily designed to deal with the serious problem of male
violence against an intimate female partner, and not the obverse. For the most part,
legislators, policy makers, legal and social service professionals and community advocates have dealt with the issue of domestic violence as primarily a problem of mens
violence against a woman partner. Across these organizations in countries throughout
the world, the operating definition of the problem they confront is overwhelmingly
one of male violence against a female partner. For them, violence against women is the
problem and the one in need of urgent solution.
The pragmatic experience of most community advocates and professionals dealing with
violence between intimates on a regular basis and the research findings of most social scientists studying this phenomenon agree that intimate partner violence is overwhelmingly
an issue of male violence against a female partner. However, the findings of some social
scientist, particularly in the United States, appear to support the notion that the phenomenon is equally likely to be womens violence against a male partner, and some even
claim that women are more likely than men to be violent to their intimate partner.
Thus, the question becomes one of who is likely to use violence against an intimate
partner: men, women or both? At stake for researchers and others is how the problem is
conceptualized (as mens violence against women, as womens violence against men, as
equivalent and/or reciprocal violence by men and by women). Also at stake, although
less so for researchers than for policy makers and practitioners in criminal justice and
social services, is the nature of actions to be taken in search of a remedy to the problem
as defined and identified. If one accepts the notion that there should be a relationship
between the nature of any social issue and the form of policies and interventions seeking
a solution, then this contradiction in definitions and findings about intimate partner
325
violence has serious implications for policy and intervention. That is, if the problem
is one of mens violence against women (asymmetry), then the current policies and
practices are apt. If the problem is one of the equivalence of violence perpetrated by
men and by women (symmetry), then the direction of current policies and practices is
inappropriate and needs to be fundamentally transformed.
Different notions among researchers about the nature of domestic violence (asymmetrical or symmetrical) have long been the subjects of popular and academic debate.
Within the area of research, contradictory findings constitute a puzzle. Working on this
puzzle is the task of this paper. The question is whether men and women are equally
likely to perpetrate violence in an intimate relationship or whether it is primarily men
who do so. In order to address this, we will focus on concept formation, definitions,
forms of measurement, context, consequences and approaches to claim-making in
order better to understand how researchers arrived at such apparently contradictory
findings and claims. We then examine in some detail the nature, severity and consequences of violence perpetrated by women against male partners, in order to consider
more carefully the nature of the violence that forms the claim of symmetry of violence
between women and men.
In order to examine womens violence, we present findings from a study that
included 95 couples in which men and women reported separately upon the violence in
their relationship. This included both mens violence against women partners and
womens violence against male partners in terms of the nature, frequency, severity and
physical and emotional consequences. A close examination of womens violence is especially important because there is a need to reflect on both mens and womens violent
behaviour in order to consider the veracity of these contradictory findings. To date,
there has been very little in-depth research about womens violence to male partners
and it is difficult, if not impossible, to consider this debate without such knowledge. But
why bother about the apparent contradictions in findings from research? For those making and implementing policies and expending public and private resources, the apparent contradiction about the very nature of this problem has real consequences for what
might be done for those who are its victims and those who are its perpetrators.
Symmetry or Asymmetry in the Perpetration of Violence to an Intimate Partner?
Over the last three decades, knowledge about intimate partner violence or domestic
violence has grown exponentially. From the outset, there has been disagreement
among researchers about definitions, methods and the resulting findings regarding the
direction and impact of violence between men and women in intimate relationships.
Elsewhere, we have characterized the two approaches to research as family violence
(FV) and violence against women (VAW) (Dobash and Dobash 1992: 25884). While
these approaches are relatively distinct, there are elements that overlap and, thus, comparisons need to be treated as characterizations rather than absolutes.
Family violence research
Family violence (FV) researchers claim that intimate partner violence is symmetrical,
with men and women equally likely to be the perpetrator of violence against an intimate
partner. In attempting to establish the prevalence of violence in relationships, FV
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researchers have primarily relied on the measurement of discrete acts, e.g. slap or
punch, as the primary or sole source of data about the violence of individual respondents. Using this act-based approach, FV researchers have variously claimed that intimate partner violence is symmetrical and reciprocal (each gives as good as they get),
or that women perpetrate more violence and are more likely than men to use severe
violence against a male partner (Straus and Gelles 1990; Morse 1995; Moffitt, Robins
and Caspi 2001). Some act-based measurements include sexual violence and show that
men are equally as likely to report sexual violence/abuse from their female partner as
the obverse. In some surveys, men are more likely than women to report sexual victimization by their partner. One US study of University students found that 38 per cent of
the men and 30 per cent of the women reported at least one incident of sexual coercion
from an intimate partner of the opposite sex. Using a sexual chronicity scale, men reported
more incidents than women (18.5 vs 11.8 incidents) (Straus, Hamby, Boney-McCoy and
Sugarman 1996).
FV researchers further suggest that womens violence to a male partner cannot be
construed as self-defence because they claim that women are equally likely to initiate
violence (Stets and Straus 1990: 161), and because the individual characteristics of
women who use such violence parallel those of their violent male partner (Moffitt et al.
2001). With no consideration of the sequence of acts involved in a violent event and
based on the notion of similar individual characteristics likely to predict abuse, FV
researchers assume equivalence in mens and womens motivations and, in turn, the
likelihood that the violence may have been used in self-defence (Moffitt et al. 2001: 25,
n. 8). Further, this act-based approach to the measurement of violence is usually based
on the assumption that men and women can and do provide unbiased, reliable accounts
of their own violent behaviour and that of their partner. Using this approach, reports of
violence and injuries from men or women, from victims or perpetrators, about oneself
or about ones partner are all treated as unproblematic and as a solid evidentiary basis
for estimates of prevalence and the development of explanatory accounts (Morse 1995;
Moffitt, Caspi, Krueger, Magdol, Margolin, Silva and Sydney 1997; Archer 1999).
Despite the claims of equal violence by men and by women, policy suggestions regarding womens violence are not generally offered. However, a prominent proponent of the
symmetry thesis has noted that assaults by women are a serious social problem, and suggests that . ..assaults by wives are one of the many causes of wife beating [our emphasis]. ..
(Straus 1993: 78, 80). As such, it is the responsibility of wives to refrain from physical
attacks on their male abuser no matter what the provocation (Straus 1993: 80). Furthermore, if womens assaults cause more male violence, then public policy and practices
should change accordingly, . . . including public service announcements, police arrest policy, and treatment programmes for batterers (Straus 1993: 80). According to this notion,
ending male violence against women is at least partially dependent on women ending
their violence against men. Stressing the supposed equivalent and reciprocal nature of
mens and womens violence both as perpetrators and as victims, others propose conjoint,
couple therapy in order to deal with this problem (Moffitt 2001: 27).
Violence against women research
VAW researchers claim that intimate partner violence is asymmetrical, with men more
likely than women to perpetrate violence against an intimate partner. Historical and
327
contemporary evidence from many societies indicates that lethal and non-lethal intimate partner violence is overwhelmingly perpetrated by men against women (Dobash
and Dobash 1979; 1992; Pleck 1987; Gordon 1988; Daly and Wilson 1988; Levinson
1989; Dobash, Dobash, Wilson and Daly 1992; Wilson and Daly 1992, 1998; Kurz 1993;
Bourgois 1995; Nazroo 1995; Descola 1996; Dobash et al., 2004). For example, when
men and women are asked to report on victimization throughout their lifetime (ever
prevalence), women report at least two to four times more violence than men, and
women are much more likely to report chronic levels of abuse (Gaquin 1977/78;
Schwartz 1987; Sacco and Johnson 1990; Bachman and Saltzman 1995; Tjaden and
Thoennes 1998; Mirrless-Black 1999). Direct measures of the consequences of violent
acts suggest that women are much more likely than men to report physical injuries and
emotional and psychological effects (e.g. depression, anxiety and fear) as a result of
mens violence toward them (Schwartz 1987; Campbell 1998; Dobash and Dobash
2001). Ironically, FV researchers acknowledge that women are six to ten times more
likely than men to sustain serious injuries as a consequence of violent acts by their partner (Straus 1993; Gelles 1997: 93) but some, nonetheless, continue to claim that
women are more likely than men to perpetrate violence, including severe violence,
against an intimate partner. What might this mean?
VAW researchers stress that in order to understand this violence, it should be studied
within the wider context of ongoing violent events and intimate relationships. Violent
events should also be studied within the context of actions and intentions associated
with the event and its aftermath. Purely act-based approaches rarely consider contextual issues that promote fuller understandings and more adequate explanations of such
events. When one considers the violent event in the context of an intimate relationship,
evidence suggests that mens physical and sexual violence against women is often associated with a constellation of abuse that includes a variety of additional intimidating,
aggressive and controlling acts (Pence and Paymar 1993; Dobash et al. 2000; Gondolf
2002). Physical and sexual acts of violence and the wider constellation of abuse may
result in physical injuries as well as other related emotional and/or economic consequences for victims as men seek to control and regulate the lives of women partners
(Browne, Salomon, Bassuk 1999; Campbell 1999; Lloyd and Taluc 1999; MacMillan and
Gartner 1999). Such consequences and the wider constellation of abuse are not evident in reports about womens violence against male partners.
Researchers who study the whole violent event, rather than a list of acts that may have
occurred across many such events, find that womens violence (lethal and non-lethal) is
often associated with self-defence and/or retaliation against a male partner. This frequently occurs after years of physical abuse from the male partner (Berk, Berk, Loseke and
Rauma 1983; Browne 1987; Daly and Wilson 1988; Browne, Williams and Dutton 1999).
Professionals who work with male abusers also find that the violence women direct at male
partners usually, though not always, occurs in a context of ongoing violence and aggression by men directed at women (Saunders 1988; Pence and Paymar 1993; Miller 2001).
Defining, Measuring and Reporting Intimate Partner Violence and Abuse
The debates in this arena are often highly political but here we wish, instead, to focus
on methodological issues in order to consider the puzzle of how the FV and VAW
approaches to research have resulted in such different findings. We begin with the
328
leave and, as such, were defined as having abused their partner in this way (Moffitt
et al. 1997: 51). We suggest that it may be impossible to define such an act as abusive
and that it would certainly not be possible to do so without knowledge of the context in
which it occurs. Women who experience frequent violence from an intimate partner
often threaten to leave. Does this constitute the womans abuse of her violent male
partner? It seems reasonable to ask how this act can be defined as abusive.
Another problem is the conflation of violence (physical and sexual acts) with other
non-violent acts of abuse (shouting, name calling, etc.). The conflation problem
occurs at several stages: when defining the phenomenon to be studied, when measuring
acts and when reporting the findings. The two things are collapsed into a single category, variously called violence or abuse, and these terms are often used interchangeably, even after the author may have introduced them separately. A common problem is
to introduce the single topic of violence, discuss the two issues of violence (slapping,
punching) and abuse (threatening to leave, name-calling, etc.) and then report the
combined findings under a single label of violence or abuse. This problem occurs in
both the FV approach and the VAW approach (e.g. Dekeserady 2000) and can lead to
confusion and/or to misleading findings. For example, researchers may conclude that
women are just as violent as men when what may, in fact, be under discussion is mens
acts of physical and sexual violence and womens acts of arguing or shouting.
This is not to claim that women never engage in acts of physical violence, but here
the problem is one of conflating verbal acts with physical/sexual acts and referring
to all of them as violence. In other words, the problem is one of definitions about
what counts as violencephysical/sexual acts and/or verbal actsat the point
when the data are collected and then at the point at which the findings are reported.
At the first point of data collection or measurement, the information gathered may in
fact be about a variety of physical and sexual acts, as well as various verbal acts but, at
the final point of presenting findings, all of these differences are collapsed into one
category or concept of violence, abuse or aggression. This is also not to imply that
non-violent acts of abuse are not problematic or consequential but, rather, that these
acts and their consequences should be clearly differentiated, examined and reported
in their own right.
Conceptualizing Violence and Abuse
Within both the FV and VAW approaches, researchers sometimes fail to articulate the
complex nature of intimate partner violence as they build their concepts and the tools
used to measure it. Many of the act-based approaches are so highly operational that
the specification of what counts as intimate partner abuse and/or violence is restricted
simply to the lists of acts used to gather data. Theoretical definitions and concepts play
almost no role in the approach in which violence is no more or less than what is measured using the list of acts. Even when issues beyond the acts, such as the intent to do
harm, are included in the definition of violence, these are rarely if ever measured
(Gelles and Straus 1979; Gelles 2000: 7856).2 Such an operationalist approach to the
meaning of concepts has a long history in the physical and social sciences, although its
2
In the Canadian Violence Against Women Study, Johnson added the notion of intention to do harm to several of the items on
the modified CTS (Johnson and Sacco 1995).
331
serious limitations have been exposed from the outset (Bridgman 1927; Lundberg
1942; Adler 1947). In order to generate more adequate explanatory accounts, concepts
need to be embedded in explicit theoretical frameworks. In so doing, definitions and
the meaning of concepts such as violence and abuse are made more explicit. In
short, in order to research any social issue and the policies and interventions associated
with it, it is necessary adequately to define and specify the problem itself.
Social scientists and philosophers have long suggested that an understanding of the
social world would advance through a careful consideration of the role of concepts and
their development in social research. Lazarsfeld (1967) suggested several stages in the
development of concepts: articulate an initial imagery of the concept; specify the
dimensions associated with the concept and divide it into its constituent parts; translate the various parts into observable indicators that can be measured empirically; and
combine the empirical indicators into indices or scale scores. Through this process,
researchers can specify the significant properties of the phenomenon to be studied.
Lazarsfeld also suggested that researchers should begin with real life situationsnot
abstract, artificial experimentsand that concepts must be nested within an overarching theoretical framework in order to be meaningful for empirical research: In scientific inquiry, concept formation and theory formation must go hand in hand (Hempel
1966: 97). A purely act-based approach to the study of intimate partner violence pays
scant attention to the initial steps in the process of concept formation, rarely offering
characterizations or definitions that specify the constituent elements of violence and/
or abuse, and rarely locating these terms in an explanatory framework. Because the
acts-based approach is highly operational, the acts that are measured are stripped of
theoretical and social meanings and, as such, provide an inadequate basis for describing or explaining the violent acts of men and women.
Claims of symmetry in the perpetration of violence by women and men, and of equivalence of the violence itself, rest almost solely on the operational procedures associated with
the act-based approach. On the other hand, asymmetry in the perpetration of violence
by men and women, and non-equivalence in the violence itself, emerge from research
using a concept specific (Dobash and Dobash 1983) approach to definitions, concepts and
measurement of violence. Let us consider the puzzle of symmetry and equivalence by
focusing primarily on the violence of women against an intimate male partner. We begin by
considering the importance of studying couples, and then proceed to our own study.
Intimate Partner Violence: Studies of Couples
When attempting to study mens and womens accounts of shared experiences, it is useful
to study those who have shared such experiences. An important method of investigating
the potentially conflicting accounts of intimate partner violence is to compare the reports
of couplesaccounts of victims and perpetrators, i.e. parties to the same events. There is a
long history of studying couples in order to consider the lives that men and women lead
within intimate relationships and families, and to reflect on the different ways in which
they report and evaluate their common experiences. The focus has often been on household tasks and attitudes and the findings often show divergence between men and women
about some of the most common aspects of the world they occupy together (for a review,
see Szinovacz 1983). One might expect to find even more divergence between the
accounts of men and women about the far more contentious issue of violence.
332
Research using couples generally shows that men and women often disagree about
the occurrence of violence in relationships (see, e.g. Szinovacz 1983; Jouriles and OLeary
1985; Browning and Dutton 1986; Edleson and Brygger 1986; Margolin 1987; Cantos,
Nazroo 1995; Moffitt et al. 1997; Dobash et al. 1998; Archer 1999; Schafer, Caetano and
Clarke 2002). So how do we understand these differences? More expansive information
about the context of violent events and their meanings to those involved help make
sense of the differences between mens and womens accounts and move toward a
fuller understanding of the dynamics of such events and relationships.
In an extensive review of the literature, Margolin (1987) concluded that there was
little overall agreement between couples about mens and womens violence, and that
women are more likely than men to acknowledge their own violence. Women were also
more likely to experience considerably more violence and womens initiation of violence
was often appropriately defined as protective reactive responsesa term initially
used by Gelles (1997). She noted that Spouses may have different definitions and
thresholds as to what they view as violent, may ascribe self-serving labels and interpretations to behaviours, or, simply falsify reports (Margolin 1987: 77). One significant
finding of Margolins own research was that it was impossible to make sense of her
results without a consideration of the meanings attached to the violence of men and
women. She noted that, While CTS items appear behaviourally specific, their meanings
are open to question (Margolin 1987: 82). As an example of this problem, she cites a
couple that reported kicking each otherclearly an act of violenceyet, in her
subsequent in-depth interviews, she discovered that this was a playful activity that they
engaged in when in bed. She concluded that assessments of violence should include a
consideration of the severity of injuries, the perceptions of the victims and the
intentions of the attackers: A womans hardest punches, which might be laughed at
by her husband, would count as husband abuse based on actions alone (Margolin
1987: 83).
A study of intimate partner violence reported by couples
In order to consider the claims of equivalence in the perpetration of violence by men
and by women, we present findings from in-depth interviews with couples that were part
of a larger study of criminal justice intervention in intimate partner violence (Dobash
et al. 2000). The wider study included a sample of 122 men and 134 women, drawn from
cases dealt with in two different courts. The sample used here is based on 190 interviews
with 95 men and 95 women.3 In-depth interviews were conducted separately with men
and women. A context-specific method was used4 and both quantitative and qualitative
data were gathered. While mens violence was the main focus of the study, womens violence and aggression were also examined. Using the quantitative and qualitative data
from the interviews, we examined the prevalence and incidents of mens violence and
womens violence, the detailed nature of the physical and sexual acts involved, and of
the injuries inflicted. Focusing on womens violence, we consider the nature of
womens violence, of mens reactions and the issue of self-defence. Little is known
3
Studies of couples where violence is involved usually have relatively small samples because of issues of access, cooperation of
both parties, safety and the like; they range in size from 30 to 360 (Browning and Dutton 1986; Cantos et al. 1994; Jouriles and
OLeary 1985; Margolin 1987; Moffitt et al. 2001; Nazroo 1995; Szinovacz 1983).
4
For further delineation of the context-specific approach, see Dobash and Dobash 1979; 1983; Dobash et al. 2000.
333
about the specific nature and context of womens violence and yet this is essential if the
claim of equivalence between men and women is to be assessed.
All the men in the study had been convicted of an act involving violence against their
partner and, as such, constitute a criminal justice sample of male perpetrators. Some
researchers argue that individuals involved with criminal justice may be reluctant to discuss their illegal acts; we did not find this. It may be that once such acts have been
made public, men and women partners are able to discuss them with a researcher, provided they receive the usual guarantees of confidentiality and anonymity. Certainly,
offenders may be reticent to report violent criminal acts if reporting rules require
researchers and professionals to report heretofore undisclosed criminal acts (this usually occurs in cases of physical and/or sexual violence against children). This was not
the case in the jurisdictions included in this study and we had no such problems. It
should be noted that while the focus of this paper is on womens violence to a male
partner, the sample is drawn from men who have used violence against a woman partner. As such, womens violence is being examined in the context of mens violence.
While it might be useful to study only women who have been arrested for using nonlethal violence against a male partner, this is such a rare occurrence that it would be
difficult to obtain an adequate sample.5 As such, womens violence within the context
of a sample of male abusers may be the most realistic approach to sampling, given that
the focus is on violent behaviour and not domestic conflicts, disagreements, arguments, name calling and the sort of aggressive behaviour often measured using the
CTS and, in turn, defined as violence. As with all samples, this one has its limitations,
but this sample has allowed us to open a window on the existing body of knowledge by
providing intensive and extensive knowledge about intimate partner violence from
both men and women partners, who discussed at length and in great detail their own
violence and that of their partner.
In using only couples, we focus on violent events where both parties were present.
The main concern is to consider mens accounts and womens accounts of violent
acts, events, injuries and consequences, as well as their contexts, meanings and interpretations.6 Both quantitative and qualitative results are presented. Violence is conceptualized as malevolent physical or sexual acts, used in a purposive manner and
intended to inflict physical and/or psychological harm. Such acts usually, although not
always, have harmful consequences for the victim, particularly physical injuries. In addition, the wider constellation of abuse includes acts that are not physical per se but are
meant to frighten, intimidate and coerce. Intimidating and coercive acts are measured and/or assessed separately and reported separately from physical/sexual acts, in
order that they are not conflated. It should be stressed that coercive and intimidating
acts may have important and negative consequences for victims but, as discussed earlier, it is important that they are not collapsed into one category and referred to as
though there is no difference between them.
5
Of the 933 court cases of domestic violence from which the present sample was drawn, there were only three cases of women
charged with using violence against a male partner.
6
When reporting findings from couples, it is important to disaggregate the reports of men from those of women. In their sample
of 360 young couples, Moffitt et al. (2001: 13, 20) identified and reported upon 28 couples whom they defined as clinical, i.e.
reached levels of partner abuse that resulted in injury (sprains, bruises, cuts, knocked-out, loss of consciousness, broken bones,
loose teeth), medical treatment, and police and/or court conviction. The findings are presented in such a way that it is impossible
to know who (man or woman) required medical treatment, sought refuge or was arrested or convicted. This information is essential in order to assess the nature and consequences of violence perpetrated by men and by women within these relationships.
334
TABLE 1
No violence
14 events
59 events
10+ events
Womens violence to
men (ns)
Men %
Women %
Men %
Women %
30.5
55.8
9.5
4.2
21.1
47.4
17.9
13.7
40.0
50.6
7.4
2.1
46.3
44.2
4.2
5.3
335
TABLE 2
Intimate partner violence: a comparison of couples reports of violent or threatening acts perpetrated by
men against women and women against men
Acts
Damage property
Threaten to hit
Throw something to hit
Pushshove
Slap
Scratch
Punch
Kick body
Use object as weapon
Choke
Mens reports %
Womens reports %
Mens reports %
Womens reports %
80.0
69.5
68.4
94.7
82.1
62.1
68.4
54.7
37.9
48.4
87.4 (ns)
84.2 (ns)
81.1*
96.8 (ns)
88.4 (ns)
76.8 (ns)
88.4*
78.9***
60.0**
66.3***
4.2
5.3
26.3
10.5
20.0
16.8
31.6
17.9
16.8
1.1
1.1 (ns)
3.2 (ns)
25.3 (ns)
20.0 (ns)^
29.5 (ns)^
10.5 (ns)
31.6 (ns)
23.2 (ns)^
15.8 (ns)
1.1 (ns)
partner, with about 15 per cent saying that they had demanded sex and about 3 per
cent saying that they had forced sex on their woman partner. None of the men or
women in the study reported sexual coercion or violence perpetrated by women.
Couples reports of injuries inflicted by men and women on partners
Several general patterns about injuries can be seen in Table 3 that show both concordance and discordance in the reports of men and women. First, regardless of who
is reporting, it can be seen that many more men inflict every type of injury against
women than do women against men. Secondly, some injuries are inflicted by a fair
percentage of men but by very few women (e.g. split lip, fractured teeth/bones,
black-out/unconscious). Thirdly, a considerable percentage of men and of women
TABLE 3
A comparison of couples reports of injuries inflicted by men against women partners and by women
against male partners
Injuries
Bruise
Black eye
Cut body
Cut/scratch face
Split lip
Fracture teeth/bones
Black-out/unconscious
Mens reports %
Womens reports %
Mens reports %
Womens reports %
87.4
57.9
18.9
36.8
31.6
21.1
13.7
96.8 (ns)
76.8**
45.3***
53.7***
61.1***
42.1***
33.7***
12.6
9.5
11.6
26.3
3.2
5.3
2.1
13.7 (ns)^
4.2 (ns)
8.4 (ns)
27.4 (ns)^
2.1 (ns)
1.1 (ns)
1.1 (ns)
337
report that men inflict bruises and black eyes on women but both report that women
rarely do the same to men. Overall, the couples agree that the injuries inflicted by
women upon men are less frequent and less severe. By contrast, the couples disagree
about the injuries inflicted by men upon women, with men reporting less of their own violence to their partner, while women report more of mens violence. In short, men
and women tend to agree about the low level of injuries inflicted by women upon
men but differ about the frequency and severity of injuries inflicted by men upon
women.
In addition to the injuries shown in Table 3, others have not been included because
they were only inflicted by men upon women but not the obverse (e.g. miscarriage, 5 per
cent; vomiting, 57 per cent). As reported elsewhere, these data also show that while
many men inflicted injuries on a frequent basis, women rarely did so (Dobash et al.
2000: 1889). The greater levels of agreement between men and women about injuries
inflicted by women may be because women commit far less violence and inflict far
fewer injuries and, as such, each event and each injury may be more memorable to
both parties.
Perceived seriousness of mens and womens violence
Women and men were also asked about their perceptions of the seriousness of their
partners violence to them. As shown in Table 4, the overall pattern is one in which
men and women generally agree that mens violence is serious or very serious and that
womens violence is not serious or slightly serious. The vast majority of both women
(82.0 per cent) and men (66.1 per cent) describe mens violence as either serious or
very serious, whereas only 36.0 per cent of women and 28.5 per cent of men describe
womens violence similarly.
Contextualizing Womens Violence against Male Partners
Evidence from this study provides information about the prevalence of violence and
injuries among couples and the perceived seriousness of mens and womens violence.
TABLE 4
A comparison of couples reports of the seriousness of violence by men against women and women
against men
Seriousness
Not serious
Slightly serious
Serious
Very serious
Mens reports
(n = 92) %
Womens reports
(n = 92) %
Mens reports
(n = 56) %
Womens reports
(n = 50) %
10.5
23.4
38.4
27.7
100%
5.0
13.0
36.0
46.0
100%
55.4
16.1
23.2
5.3
100%
40.0
24.0^
32.0^
4.0
100%
338
While the main pattern is one of mens violence to women, nonetheless the evidence
suggests that some women do commit violence against male partners. Here, we examine womens violence by considering more fully its nature, context and consequences,
as well as how men and women view womens violence. In order to do this, we use qualitative evidence from the in-depth interviews, which were tape-recorded and analysed
using QSR Nud.ist software. The qualitative findings presented below corroborate the
quantitative findings presented above. The qualitative findings reveal the nature of the
differences between mens and womens violence and provide insight into the meanings each attaches to it.
Nature of womens violence
The findings presented in Tables 14 suggest that while women do not generally use
serious, consequential violence or perpetrate violence on a frequent basis, men and
women report that a few women do use serious violence against their male partner.
During the lengthy interviews in which violent events were discussed in detail, women
were usually more willing to speak at length about their own violence than were men.
The following comments illustrate this violence.
How serious would you say your violence was? Well I suppose the fact that I stabbed him made it pretty
serious. I was arrested for attempted murder but, I mean, he gets arrested for a domestic and I get
arrested for attempted murder. It was dropped to assault, right enough, and I got eighteen months
probation. (woman.1082)
That time he had cracked my cheekbone, I went for him with a knife. After he done it [abused her], I
just went for him. (woman.1160)
Reports of serious violence by women were not the norm, as shown in the reports of
injuries in Table 3 and the evaluation of seriousness in Table 4. Accordingly, the majority of mens and womens reports show a restricted range of acts and types of injuries
perpetrated by women, as revealed in the comments of both men and women.
Have you ever been violent to him? Oh, Ive kind of thrown things, and things like that, but no punching
and kicking or that kind of thing. (woman.1041)
Well, apart from throwing that cup, which I dont see as being violent because I got it worse that time.
(woman.1064)
How many times has [she] been violent to you? Four or five times. What usually leads up to this? An argument
over something or other and [she] lashes out but, as I say, she throwsit could be just a wet cloth or
shell punch me in the chest or something like that or hit me with the strap of her handbag but its
never, very rarely, sore. Have you ever had any injuries? Except for her scratching me, thats the only real
injury Ive had. Shes never bruised me. (man.056)
Does she ever resort to violence? Yes. What would she do? Throw a cup, break the hi-fi. (man.055)
the context of womens reactions to mens violence. The 95 women indicated that they
reacted to the violence perpetrated against them in ways that illustrate the impact and
importance of these events in their lives. Here, we report only a few. Most women said
they were usually frightened (79 per cent), felt helpless (60 per cent), alone (65
per cent) and trapped (57 per cent). They felt abused (65 per cent) but were also
bitter (82 per cent) and angry (80 per cent).
Mens reactions to womens violence against them usually did not reflect the negative consequences similar to those reported by women. Of the men who described their
response to the violence of their woman partner, the largest proportion said they were
not bothered (26 per cent), followed by those who felt that the woman was justified
(20 per cent) and those who ridiculed her (17 per cent) or were impressed (3 per
cent) that she had managed to respond. Others felt angry (14 per cent) or surprised
(6 per cent) and there were a variety of other reactions (8 per cent). Only a few of the
men felt victimized (6 per cent).
Men often described womens violence toward them as insignificant:
Has her violence toward you been serious? No, never. Not at all? No. (man.123)
Do you feel concerned about her violent behaviour? No, not really. (man.116)
Some men found it impossible to contemplate womens violence. It was only men
who could and should use violence, not women.
What do you think about her being violent to you? Well, I think shes not got the right to do that. Im a man,
shes a woman! (man.008)
He says its degrading to him to have a woman lift her hand to him. (woman.1082)
Has [she] ever been violent to you? No, because shes a woman, Im a man. Basically, my wifes 98lbs.
(man.041)
A few men even expressed a form of admiration of the womans violent reaction to
their abuse. For them, the violence seemed to be the only meaningful expression of her
objections to his violence toward her. While women repeatedly expressed their rejection
of and anger about his violence to her, for some men these actions were invisible or
inconsequential. Women may have reacted in these ways for many years; it was only
340
when she acted like a man that he appeared to notice her objections. Ironically, the
womans response to the mans repeated abuse might serve to expurgate his guilt.
How do you feel about the violence? Good. Hows that? The fact that shes getting her aggression back out
on me what I used to do to her. (man.038)
It did me good. I was quite pleased she did it because I knew she was starting to stand up for herself.
(man.089)
Both the quantitative and qualitative evidence suggest that mens reactions to and
interpretations of the violence they experienced differ from those expressed by women
about mens violence. The fear, bewilderment and helplessness expressed by the
women were not apparent in the responses of the men. Unlike the women, few of the
men reacted to the violence in ways that suggested it had seriously affected their sense
of well-being or the routines of their daily life. Rather, in those relationships in which
womens violence occurred, men were often unconcerned and viewed it as relatively
inconsequential and of no lasting effect. Although a few men were affected in a negative fashion and did experience serious injuries, this was not the norm for most of the
men in the study.
Self-Defence
The issue of self-defence in intimate partner violence has been a subject of
considerable debate. As recognized in law, the concept of self-defence and its corollary, provocation, incorporate contextual and situational elements (Polk 1997). In
order to define an act as self-defence, it is necessary to consider the context in
which the act occurred, including the interaction between the individuals
involved. These elements are essential in the application of the term self-defence.
It is inappropriate, as has been done in some research, to infer self-defence or
lack thereof from simple, static information, such as the personal characteristics
of the individuals involved and/or who acted first (Moffitt et al. 2001: 25; Stets and
Strauss 1990: 161).
In this study, men and women were asked about the use of violence in self-defence.
The responses are highly gendered and illustrate the complexity of this issue. Men generally did not use the term self-defence to describe their violence toward women.
When discussing the violent event that led to their arrest and conviction, only six of the
95 men indicated that they hit their partner because she hit him first, but even they
did not describe this as self-defence. By contrast, women often used the term selfdefence or self-protection to describe their violence to men.
Men and women were asked whether womens use of violence was always in selfdefence. Focusing only on responses from individuals where women had used violence,
75 per cent of these women said their violence was always in self-defence and 54 per
cent of men agreed. The different terms used by respondents to describe what might
be seen as reactions in response to particular acts of violence (e.g. raise an arm to
deflect a blow, push against the chest in order to facilitate running from the room to
escape further blows, etc.) raise questions about how such acts might be defined by the
men and women involved, as well as by researchers. Are these acts of self-protection
and/or self-defence, or acts of violence? Acts of self-protection might include such
341
things as putting ones arms up to deflect an oncoming blow, while an act of selfdefence might include the return of a blow. Surely, these are not acts of malevolent
violence. This is a complex issue, as reflected in some of the comments made by men
and women about womens violence.
Was she ever violent when you were arguing? No, not really. She would usually try and protect herself.
(man.089)
What did you usually try to do? I tried to hold my hands up. To protect yourself? Yes, and when he used to
punch me, I used to try and grab his hands or just hold his hands, and hed be kicking me. He would
just come up and kick me but I would try to put out my hand to stop him from kicking me. I was trying
to defend myself really, which I never done before. (woman.1064)
Did [she] ever try to stop you being violent to her? Shed pick up something, like a glass for instance and
warn me. Shes kicked me out of the house and I couldnt get back in because of the [my] violence.
(man.041)
These quotes demonstrate some of the complications of this issue. In the literature,
it is often implied that womens reactions to mens violence do not include elements
of retaliation and/or revenge. In this study, it was clear that women did at times
respond to their abusive male partner out of reactive anger about a specific attack
against her or as a result of the cumulative effect of many attacks over a prolonged
period of abuse.
Have you ever been violent to him? Only sort of in self-defence. So you have retaliated if you have been hurt?
Yes. Have you ever hurt him in any way or has he been bruised as a result of what you have done? The first time
it happened, I picked up a shoe and smacked him across the face with it and his nose went a bit
squifff for a while, but then things went back to normal [him hitting her]. (woman.1081)
Hes hurt me a good few times but Ive always been able to fight back, except for the last time. One night
I told him if he didnt stop hitting me Id pick something up and hit him with it, and I did. I picked up
an empty juice bottle and hit him with it. But it was the only way I could get him to stop. And he was
going to get me charged for hitting him . . . and I said to the policeman Oh, thats fine, go ahead, charge
me. But what about what hes done to me? That doesnt matter because I defended myself? And the
policeman, said, Right, well separate you for the night. (woman.1066)
342
344
and property crimes). The follow-up showed that some of the men were also assailants
and very few defined themselves as victims. Of those men who did experience some
form of violence from their female partner, they were less likely than women to be repeat
victims, to have been seriously injured and to report feeling fearful in their own home.
Based on these findings, the researchers concluded that there was no need for a special
agency or refuge provision for men (Gadd, Farrall, Dallimore and Lombard 2002). In the
United States, more women are being brought into the criminal justice system because of
domestic violence, primarily because of dual arrests of both the man and the woman
(Miller 2001). This may suggest the occurrence of violence by both women and men and
the need for victim services for both. However, a closer examination of these cases suggested that the majority of the women were rarely the primary perpetrator, were often
the victims of violence from their male partner, and that mens and womens need for
services were rarely equivalent (Hamberger and Poternte 1994; Miller 2001).
If womens violence is not equivalent to that of men and does not require identical
policies and interventions, then how do we conceive of womens violence and what is to
be done by way of intervention and prevention? According to the findings of this and other
research, when womens violence against a male partner does occur, it is usually, although
not always, in the context of mens violence to the woman (Swan and Snow 2002).
However, as already stated, this violence is rarely identical or truly reciprocal. The type
and level of violence, the nature and number of injuries, the perceived seriousness of the
violence and the sense of safety and well-being are not the same for men and women. For
the most part, womens violence is reactive and self-protective and is often in self-defence.
As mentioned earlier, it has been suggested that one strategy for reducing intimate partner violence is to propose that woman never use violence against a male partner, regardless of the circumstances, because this may result in the escalation of the mans violence
against the woman (Straus 1993). It is neither possible nor reasonable to make fixed recommendations about the nature of how any woman should respond to violence against
her, because it is impossible to know the relevant circumstances within a given event or
relationship. It would be similar to recommending in advance that a woman who is being
raped should never fight back or always fight back. Perhaps a more positive strategy for
preventing or reducing womens violence, and one in keeping with the findings of this
study, is to eliminate mens violence against women partners.
Reductions in the rates of homicide in the United States over the last two decades
reflect on several aspects of this issue: womens serious violence, fighting back in the context of violence from the male partner and relevant interventions for the victim and the
perpetrator. In the United States, as elsewhere, much of the lethal violence committed by
women against men occurs in the context of ongoing physical abuse by the man (Browne
1987; Wilson and Daly 1992). In the United States, there has been a significant reduction
in homicides among intimate partners, particularly the killing of African-American men
by their women partners. Evidence suggests that this reduction in intimate partner homicides is related to more effective responses to abusers and improved social and legal services for abused women. These provide women with supports and escape routes so that
they are less likely to respond to mens violence in this most extreme fashion (Browne and
Williams 1989; 1993; Browne, Williams and Dutton 1999). As such, policies and interventions aimed at eliminating mens violent abuse of women, along with services for women
victims, may be important contributors to the reduction in homicides where women use
lethal violence against a male partner against a backdrop of ongoing violence against her.
345
Finally, what is to be done about the very small number of women who may initiate
severe, persistent, repeat physical and sexual violence against a male partner in a context
of no violence from the man? We have yet to see any evidence that would enable us to consider this issue. Identification of this putative group would require the same kind of intensive studies that have been done on mens violence, using both qualitative and quantitative
data to provide a holistic picture of the violence and the context, consequences, motives
and intentions associated with it. What is required is research methods that provide a
more adequate representation of this violence and the contexts in which it occurs, rather
than conceptual and operationalist abstractions that are once removed from such real-life
events. Even if this were to be found, all extant evidence would predict that the numbers
would be very small. As such, priority should continue to be given to policies that seek to
effectively intervene to end violence against women in intimate relationships.
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