Unit 7 of our course includes topics, such as Developmental
Psychology, Personality Psychology, and Health Psychology. This post is meant to relate to this unit, so it seems a
reasonably appropriate time to talk about how Intimate Partner Violence can
occur and how these situations may develop. People can have more or less
adaptive and functional personalities. Similarly, relationships can be
functional and healthy for both members or not. Peoples’ genetics, their
environment, and their experiences determine whether they develop to be
healthy, happy, and productive. Relationships may also develop in ways that
benefit each member’s well-being or they may develop in ways that are damaging
to one or both members.
The history
of research on IPV focused on the obviously tragic cases of one member (usually
the female member experiencing multiple violent assaults from the other member
(usually the male member). Although it always feels like we could provide more
details and go deeper in our analysis, we have discussed this scenario to a
reasonable extent in previous blog posts. Researchers refer to this kind of
relationship as “intimate terrorism”. It’s clearly an important social problem
that should be addressed through criminal justice and mental health efforts to
modify the behaviour of the violent offenders. This problem also warrants aggressive
efforts to help and protect victims. It’s obvious who the culprit is in this
sort of scenario and who the victim is. Most of us can easily agree about who
is to blame and who needs fixing versus who is the blameless one who made a
very unfortunate choice when selecting a mate.
We’ll start with a discussion of how that sort of intimate partner
violence often develops.
In other
instances, violence may occur in intimate partner relationships, but deciding
who the victim vs. who is the abuser (or whether there even is a victim or
abuser) can be much less obvious. Researchers call this scenario “common couple
violence”. In such cases, both members
of a couple engage in mild violence toward one another that rarely causes any
serious injury. In this posting, we will also briefly discuss how that sort of
IPV develops.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF
“INTIMATE TERRORISM”
Controlling Behaviour in the Guise of Romance
For the sake
of efficiency, we’ll focus on the more common scenario, involving a male
partner becoming physically abusive to their female intimate partner. As a
couple become involved, emotions and romance is high. The male partner may tend
to call a lot and present gifts and wants to constantly get updated on what his
female partner is doing and where she is. The female member will often
experience all of this attention as evidence for how caring her partner is.
Expressions of jealousy by the male member are common precursors to “intimate
terrorism”, but tend to be interpreted as further evidence of how much he cares
about his partner.
Mild Violence and Passionate Forgiveness
At some
point, usually under some form of stress, the male member will slap or hit his
female partner. This action will tend not to cause any injury and the male
member will express remorse and beg for forgiveness. The female member will
then often accept this apology and forgive. They might well have passionate sex
as a sort of proof as to the continued strength of their commitment to one
another. Perversely, sex following a violent act can serve as a positive
reinforcement for that action, increasing the probability that the violence
will occur again. Moreover, the arousal from fighting itself can be
misinterpreted as sexual arousal, which can also feed sexual passion. This
tendency for people to misinterpret the source of their arousal can also help
to reinforce these violent acts.
Gradual Escalation in Severity and
Frequency
Perhaps some
amount of time will pass, but the male member engages in violence again.
Gradually, perhaps over months or years, incidents accumulate and the violence
becomes more severe, with incidents becoming increasingly frequent. The male
members’ remorse for incidents become less intense and pleas for forgiveness
become less urgent and energetic. The male member begins blaming the female
member for the need to get violent with her. He starts to insult her verbally.
It is a fairly common strategy for people to avoid guilty feelings for their
actions by blaming their victim and thinking that their victim is somehow
deserving of horrible treatment. At this point, rape and other forms of sexual
violence are fairly common.
Sadly, the
escalation of mild violence, such as slapping and pushing, to severe beating
and rape may occur so gradually that neither member may be aware of the
emerging pattern until it becomes extreme and even life-threatening.
Unfortunately, it is even common for the female member to only think about
individual incidents and to blame herself by searching for and generating an
explanation for individual incidents without considered the overall pattern of
abuse that, when considered together, would clearly reveal that they are being
victimized by a sick and abusive partner. Also, out of embarrassment from
being regularly abused by her partner, the female member may often hide the
abuse she is experiencing and socially isolate herself to avoid others
discovering her situation.
The male member
in this type of abusive relationship will tend to be very moody and
controlling, constantly needing to monitor her behaviour. He will have problems
with self-control and may even be prone to cheating, which can partly account
for the tendency for such “intimate terrorists” to be very distrustful of their
female partner. Thus, the male partner’s seeming romantic behaviour from early
in their relationship becomes revealed as what it truly was: efforts at
oppression and a jealous guarding of the female partner against the possibility
that she might find another man and leave.
Full-Blown Intimate Terrorism
Ultimately,
violence by the male member against his female partner becomes commonplace. The
male member holds a contradictory disgust for his female partner and a
compulsion to control her every action. Violent outbursts occur whenever the
male perceives his totality of control to be under threat. If they have
children, the male partner’s violence extends to them, as well. Verbal abuse is
chronic, both when the couple is alone or around others, and there is
devastation to female member’s self-esteem because of the constant verbal
insults and physical attacks. In the female member’s mind, the abuse comes to
serve as evidence of her own worthlessness, further reinforced by the male
partner’s constantly expressing the opinion that she has nowhere else to go and
nobody else would ever love her. Efforts to fight back against her stronger
male partner will be ineffective and will tend only to worsen the severity of
his attacks.
When their
relationship becomes this bad, women may seek help from police or protection
from a women’s shelter out of understandable fear for their own life or for the
safety of their children. However, even when women victims of such intimate
terrorism seek help, they frequently return to their abusive partner. Sometimes
this decision to return occurs out of love for her abusive male partner and an
honest desire to try to help and change him. In other cases, it is a response
to the male partner’s threats to cause harm to people the woman loves, such as
her children or other family members, if she does not return.
WHY DO THESE TERRORIZED WOMEN STAY?
1. LOVE for their partner, despite the
violence.
2.
LONELINESS and a belief that they won’t be able find someone else.
3. A FEAR OF TRYING TO GO IT ALONE and being unable to survive on one's own because of low self-esteem or lack of
money.
4. A FEAR OF THE VIOLENCE GETTING WORSE for herself or other loved ones if she does not stay in the relationship.
5. A PESSIMISTIC BELIEF that a different partner will be as likely to be abusive as their current
abusive partner. (This belief is perhaps common amongst women who have
experienced abuse from their parents during childhood. If violence is a theme
in one’s life, is there any reason to expect less violence when picking a
different romantic partner? The answer is, obviously, YES (!), but it is
understandable why someone’s sad history would make them pessimistic.)
WHAT ABOUT WHEN THESE WOMEN LEAVE?
Many women
do leave their abusive partners and that tends to be the only way to stop the
violence they experience at the hands of their intimate partners. That is, once
violence is an established feature of an intimate relationship, it tends to
persist as long as the relationship continues. Leaving tends to require the
woman’s belief that her prospects will be better leaving than staying. Note
that it is belief that is critical in this decision, not reality. People can
believe that they are better off in any number of ways by staying with an
abusive partner, but that belief doesn’t need to have any basis in truth and
often doesn’t for women who have lowered self-esteem from the abuse they’ve
experienced and who feel ashamed and blame themselves for ending up with an
abusive partner. Sadly, the violence itself can provide other reasons for the
woman to believe that her prospects are not better outside of the relationship,
as the male member uses it to make it difficult for the female member to
acquire skills through education or to prevent them from finding or keeping a job.
The reality
of this “intimate terrorism” is all very upsetting to write about, people, and
it’s probably not all that pleasant to read about. What it amounts to is a sort
of slavery that destroys both members of a partnership. One member finds themselves
in the role of slave, with all of the feelings of worthlessness, constant state
of fear, and mental and physical health problems that goes along with being
someone’s slave. The other member finds themselves a slave-owner, who succeeds
in gaining almost total control over the individual they started out deeply in
love with. Ironically, their success in achieving total control destroys all
aspects of their partner that was the source of their initial passion for them,
in the first place. Their natural tendency to seek justification for their own
brutality also requires an active development of disgust and loathing for the
person that they insist on controlling through violence, threats, and verbal
abuse. In making their partner into a slave, they only have two options. The
abuser must view himself as a worthless monster or must consider his partner
worthless and undeserving of personal safety or freedom. In the end, he has
made both himself and his female partner wretchedly miserable and, in
almost all cases, the only cure for either of them is to end the relationship.
COMMON PARTNER
VIOLENCE
As research
on IPV has developed, it has become clear that, sometimes, women can also be
violent members of intimate partnerships and not simply in reaction to violent
assaults by their male partners.
By the
1980s, research on violence within intimate relationships made it necessary to
recognize that sometimes violence is mutual and about equal severity within
intimate partnerships. For example, a study by Straus, Gelles, and Steinmetz
(1980) revealed that 27% of men report experiencing violence at the hands of
their female partners, whereas only 24% of women report experiencing violence
from their male partners. Anderson (2002) reported that 10% of couples reported
violence occurring within their relationship during the previous year. In 2% of
couples, only the woman was violent, in 1% of the couples only the man was
violent, and in 7% of couples, both were violent. Frieze (2005) found that 18%
of couples report violence within their relationship (4% claimed that both
sides were severely violent toward one another and 5% reported that both sides
were violent with one another at a low level. More men than women reported that
their partner was the only violent one and more women than men reported that
they were the only violent one.)
We urge some
caution in interpreting these results, since violence appears to be more equal
for men and women when surveys inquire about violence, in general. Surveys that
orient people to criminal-level violence tend to focus them on more severe
forms of assault. Those kinds of surveys reveal male intimate partners to be
more prone to violent attacks than female ones. For example, with a survey
focusing more on criminal behaviour, including questions about sexual assault,
stalking, as well as physical assault, Tjaden and Thoennes (1998) found that
22% of women reported being assaulted by their male intimate partner at least
once, whereas only 7% of men reported being assaulted by their female intimate
partner at least once. Moreover, a careful analysis of violence occurring
within intimate partnerships consistently reveals that, when it does occur,
violence by males against their female partner is more severe and more likely
to result in injury and death than violence by females against males. To
illustrate, Archer (2000) did find more acts of physical aggression by women
against their male partners than the reverse, but also reported that women
received more injuries than men.
In any case,
the point is that women can also be violent in their relationships and, when
violence is a component of intimate partnerships, it is frequently mutually
engaged in by both members. In general, people do tend to value reciprocity,
meaning that a great predictor as to whether one member of a partnership will
act violently toward another is whether their partner has acted violently
toward them. It is the case that the intimate terrorism form of IPV described
above is less common than often less severe, more mutual forms of IPV that fall
under the heading of “Common Partner Violence”. The most common forms of this
kind of IPV involve a tendency for each member of the couple to slap, hit, or
throw things at one another. These sorts of violent altercations result in
injuries relatively rarely and, when injuries do occur, they tend to be
accidental. It isn’t exactly pretty. These are dramatic and passionate fights
in which both members behave aggressively. However, neither member possesses
any serious objective to cause their partner permanent harm. Nevertheless,
average differences size and strength between men and women mean that women are
more likely to get injured when these incidents occur. Consumption of alcohol
is a very typical factor in stimulating these sorts of fights between lovers.
WHY DO COUPLES TRY TO HURT ONE ANOTHER?
1. STRESS and ALCOHOL use make people less able to inhibit their violent
tendencies, so they respond more aggressively to things about their partner
that offend or irritate them. Researchers have observed that couples with more
children (which results in more financial and other forms of stress) and who
regularly consume more alcohol are more likely to be violently aggressive with
one another.
2. Mutual
violence often reflects a part of a broader competition by members of a couple
to try to gain CONTROL over one
another. It’s all part of a power struggle that tends to occur within couples
who are unskilled at expressing themselves in other ways, such as verbally.
3. When both
members of a couple value their PERSONAL
FREEDOM, there is a greater chance of each member engaging in violence
toward the other. Two independent-minded people in a relationship will tend to
fight more and that fighting will be more likely to become violent.
4. JEALOUSY is a common motive for mutual
violence within couples, such as when one member flirts with someone.
5. Some
people have ATTITUDES ABOUT PHYSICAL
AGGRESSION that cause them to be more willing to engage in violent acts. In
particular, they may have the idea that such acts provide proof of a passionate
love for their partner. Although the attitude may seem strange to us and to
many of our readers, couples may slap each other and throw things at one
another as a sort of evidence of their strong feelings for one another. Such
differences in, let’s say, cultural attitudes toward violence plays a role
in determining whether milder forms of mutual violence will occur within
couples. Also, in surveys, people tend to consider violence by women toward men
as more acceptable than the reverse (Slep, Cascardi, Avery-Leaf, & O’Leary,
2001). Such attitudes may account for why, when considering all forms of
violence, regardless as to the severity or whether the violence resulted in
injury, both men and women report that more violent acts are committed by women
against their male partners than the reverse.
6. When
members of a couple FEEL THAT THEIR
PARTNER HAS A LOW OPINION OF THEM, they are more likely to engage in
violence toward their partner, particularly when their partner expresses
moodiness or irritability.
7. Some
people are more naturally PRONE TO
VIOLENCE than others. For example, women who are violent generally are also
more likely to be violent within their intimate relationships (White &
Humphrey, 1994)
8. Men and
women who VIEW GENDER ROLES AS
ADVERSARIAL (e.g., perceiving men and women as forming separate groups that
are in opposition to one another) tend to be more violent in their intimate
relationships.
9. YOUNGER COUPLES tend to be more violent
than older couples.
10. Some
members of couples report engaging in low-level, mutual violence because it is SEXUALLY EXCITING. The results of some
studies suggest that couples involved in these milder, mutually violent
relationships have sex more often than those in relationships with no violence
at all (DeMaris, 1997). Other research observed no difference in relationship
satisfaction between marriages with low levels of violence and marriages with
no violence (Lawrence & Bradbury, 2001).
REFERENCES
We are
grateful for this outstanding resource:
Frieze, I.
H. (2005). Hurting the one you love:
Violence in Relationships. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
We have
relied heavily on this book when putting together this blog post. We highly
recommend this book for anyone interested learning more about IPV,
specifically, or the causes and consequences of violence, more generally.
Archer, J.
(2000). Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A
meta-analytic review. Psychological
Bulletin, 126, 651-680.
DeMaris, A.
(1997). Elevated sexual activity in violent marriages: Hypersexuality or sexual
extortion? Journal of Sex Research, 34, 361-373.
Lawrence,
E., & Bradbury, T. N. (2001). Physical aggression and marital dysfunction:
A longitudinal analysis. Journal of
Family Psychology, 15, 135-154.
Slep, A. M.
S., Cascardi, M., Avery-Leaf, S., & O’Leary, K. D. (2001). Two new measures
of attitudes about the acceptability of teen dating aggression. Psychological Assessment, 13, 306-318.
Straus, M.
A., Gelles, R. J., & Steinmetz, S. K. (1980). Behind closed doors: Violence in the American Family. Garden City,
NY: Doubleday.
Tjaden, P.,
& Thoennes, N. (1998). Prevalence,
incidence, and consequences of violence against women: Findings from the
National Violence Against Women survey. Washington, DC: National Institute
of Justice.
White, J.
W., & Humphrey, J. A. (1994). Women’s aggression in heterosexual conflicts.
Aggressive Behaviour, 20, 105-202.
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