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Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)

Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys By Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)

Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys by Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)


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Summary

This is a unique book that brings together contemporary research and practice around working with men and boys who are victims of domestic violence and abuse. The book features contributions from experts within the field who draw on the wide range of evidence that demonstrates the multifarious experiences of this victimisation.

Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys Summary

Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys: Experiences of Male Victims of Intimate Partner Violence by Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)

Expands gendered understandings of intimate partner violence.

Challenges current practice in a critical, evidence-informed manner.

Offers recommendations to improve service provision and practice for this victim group.

Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys Reviews

The new volume on male domestic violence victimization, edited by domestic violence scholars Elizabeth Bates and Julie Taylor, is a welcome addition to the growing literature on this much-neglected topic. The book provides a nice balance of empirical research findings and qualitative accounts from men whose voices are almost never heard elsewhere. As a research scholar, and as a clinician who has worked with both male and female domestic violence victims, as well as their abusers, for over three decades, I found the data presented to be accurate and up-to-date, and the personal accounts very much rang true. In particular, the chapter on men's experiences as victims of coercive control reminds us that while women are far more impacted by physical abuse, the consequences of psychological abuse are much more comparable across gender. The sections on family violence and post-separation abuse provided an enlightening set of findings with implications for disputed child custody cases, where gendered assumptions of domestic violence have for years unnecessarily kept fathers from their children, and anyone concerned about the safety of victims ought to be concerned about the findings presented in the chapter on obstacles male victims face when seeking services.

John Hamel, PhD, Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Private Practice and Editor-in-Chief of Partner Abuse.

E. Bates and J. Taylor's book presents an excellent and incisive analysis of different long-neglected issues that affect men who experience intimate partner violence. While the research on men's partner victimization has been growing in the past ten-fifteen years, the book chapters cover a broad yet powerfully nuanced array of knowledge in this area, including men's experiences of partner violence within the LGBTQ+ community, men's experiences of coercive control and post-separation abuse, boys' victimization within the family, and older men's experiences of abuse. While men's victimization is often considered a controversial issue, this book provides a balanced and nuanced analysis of the complexities of partner violence with the focus on men. Authors strongly support the use of gender-inclusive as opposed to gender-neutral language to highlight the importance of engaging consideration of men as not only the perpetrators but also as victims of abuse. As a compelling and informative work, this book is a must read for academics and practitioners alike, who seek to expand their knowledge and understanding of the challenges that men who experience partner violence face in different types of relationships and different contexts. I commend and admire Elizabeth Bates and Julie Taylor for putting together this book!

Alexandra (Sasha) Lysova, Associate Professor, School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, Canada.

Finally, here is a book that provides a resounding counterpoint to the gender-based violence discourse that focuses exclusively on female and child victimization - a discourse that has dominated global policy and politics about intimate partner violence for decades. Scientific evidence has been accumulating about the parity and impact of IPV on men and boys, yet this research and the experiences of these victims have been largely neglected and portrayed as anomalous or trivial. Bates and Taylor have compiled a set of chapters addressing a variety of topics that have been ignored in this larger IPV discourse, (e.g., intimate partner violence in the lives of gay, bisexual, and transgender men), each written in a balanced way by leading IPV scientists and scholars. The chapter authors not only review research evidence on the impact of IPV on men and boys, but they highlight topics that are ripe for scientific inquiry and understanding.

Jennifer J. Harman, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Colorado State University, USA.

About Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)

Elizabeth A. Bates is a Principal Lecturer in Psychology and Psychological Therapies at the University of Cumbria, UK. Her research focusses on working with male victims of domestic violence including their experience of physical and psychological abuse, the impact on them, and the ways in which abuse can continue and change post-separation.

Julie C. Taylor is the Head of Learning, Teaching and Student Experience within the Institute of Health at the University of Cumbria, UK. A recurrent theme of her research and practice has been meaningful stakeholder engagement and seeking to use research and evaluation methods that facilitate this. Her current research includes exploring children and young people's experiences of domestic violence.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: The importance of this volume. 2. Men's Experiences of Female-Perpetrated Intimate Partner Violence. 3. Male Victims of Intimate Partner Violence: Challenges to current theory and practice. 4. Intimate Partner Violence in the Lives of Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Men. 5. In Their Own Words: The Impact of Intimate Partner Violence and Coercive Control on Male Victims. 6. Post-separation experiences of abuse. 7. Barriers to help-seeking for male victims of intimate partner violence. 8. Male victims of intimate partner violence: Experiences with help seeking. 9. Children's experiences of IPV: Men's retrospective accounts of IPV within the family home. 10. Fathers and Intimate Partner Violence: An Autoethnographic Analysis of Current Literature on Men's Experiences of Abuse Utilizing Children. 11. Domestic Violence Victimisation in Older Men. 12. Men's victimization in the wider family: Child-to-parent violence and sibling violence. 13. Supporting male victims and survivors. 14. Working with male victims in therapeutic settings. 15. What's the point in talking about it, when I'm the one being punished for it? Men as both perpetrator and victim of intimate partner violence. 16. Police and the Criminal Justice System: Responses to male victims. 17. Concluding thoughts: Future research directions and recommendations for practice.

Additional information

NPB9780367545376
9780367545376
0367545373
Domestic Violence Against Men and Boys: Experiences of Male Victims of Intimate Partner Violence by Elizabeth A. Bates (University of Cumbria, UK)
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2022-12-30
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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