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Abused women less likely to be involved in stable relationships

              Poor women who have been physically or sexually abused in their lives are less likely to maintain stable intimate relationships, according to a new study of more than 2,500 women by researchers from The Johns Hopkins University and Penn State University .

              The women involved in the study said they want fair treatment and companionship from their partners, according to the sociologists at Johns Hopkins and Penn State .  But when it came to actually getting married or living with a man, many of those who had been abused as adults decided—at least for now—to just say “no.”  On the other hand, those who were sexually abused in childhood were not as likely to avoid relationships altogether; rather, they tended to engage in a series of short-term, transient relationships, many of them abusive.

              While there is no evidence that abuse rates have increased, the number of women postponing intimate relationships, such as marriage or cohabitation, may be on the rise, said Andrew Cherlin, the Griswold Professor of Public Policy at Johns Hopkins and lead author of the report, The Influence of Physical and Sexual Abuse on Marriage and Cohabitation, which was published in the January 21 issue of American Sociological Review.

              “What’s changed over the past few decades is the social context of abuse,” Cherlin said.  “Women don’t have to stay with abusive men anymore because they have alternatives to marriage.”

              The researchers, working in Boston , Chicago , and San Antonio as part of the long-term research project called “Welfare, Children and Families:  A Three-City Study,” surveyed a random sample of 2,402 Hispanic, black, and white women.  Ethnographic research teams studied another 256 women in-depth for several years, observing day-to-day activities and conducting repeated interviews.  All the women studied were the primary caregivers of at least one child.

              Fifty-two percent of women in the random-sample survey reported being physically or sexually abused at some point during their lives.  Twenty-four percent said they were sexually abused during childhood or adolescence.  Forty-two percent of women who had never been abused were married at the time of the survey, compared to 22 percent of women who had ever been abused.  Of the 256 women studied in-depth, one-sixth—man of whom had been physically abused as adults—said they were taking a timeout from intimate relationships with men.

              “Women’s decision to take a timeout from such relationships is an important one for policymakers to understand,” said co-author Linda Burton, director of the ethnographic component and Penn State professor of human development and sociology.  “These women are not saying they will never enter intimate relationships again, but, rather, they need recovery and reflection time from abuse they experienced as adults to avoid entering a subsequent abusive relationship.” 

              Cherlin and Burton suggest that reducing levels of sexual abuse and physical violence in families could increase the number of healthy, stable, long-term unions.  They argue that current marriage promotion policy debates at the federal and state levels, which tend to blame declining cultural values or unemployment for lower marriage rates among the poor, should also focus on the consequences of abuse.

  --Michael Levin-Epstein

  National Bulletin on Domestic Violence Prevention

  March, 2005

  Michael Levin-Epstein is a freelance writer and lawyer who worked as a managing editor at the Bureau of National Affairs Inc. for 20 years.  He is a member of the Maryland and Washington , D.C. , bars.

  The article appearing above was used with permission from Quinlan Publishing Group’s National Bulletin on Domestic Violence Prevention.  Quinlan Publishing also produces newsletters in the areas of grants for schools, grants for cities and towns, law enforcement, workers’ comp, education, and human resources.  Information about them can be found at www.quinlan.com or by calling (800) 229-2084.

 

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