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Naming and recognition of intimate partner violence and family of origin violence among LGBTQ communities in Australia

Bourne, Adam; Amos, Natalie; Donovan, Catherine; Carman, Marina; Parsons, Matthew; Lusby, Stephanie; Lyons, Anthony; Hill, Adam O.

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Authors

Adam Bourne

Natalie Amos

Marina Carman

Matthew Parsons

Stephanie Lusby

Anthony Lyons

Adam O. Hill



Abstract

Dominant framings of intimate partner violence (IPV) construct the experience as one where a cisgender man enacts violence against a cisgender woman. While often the case, this framing obfuscates the experiences of people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, gender diverse or queer (LGBTQ) and may challenge their ability to conceive of their relationship-based experiences as abusive or violent. The extent to which hostile experiences from family of origin (FOV) members are conceived or named as violence is also unclear. A large, online, national survey of LGBTQ adults separately assessed experiences of IPV and FOV in two ways: a direct question relating to abuse from a partner/s or family member/s, and a second question (asked irrespective of the previous answer) which sought to establish experience of a nuanced list of abusive acts that can constitute violence (including emotional abuse, LGBTQ-specific forms of violence and enforced social isolation). Following comparison of responses, multiple regression analyses were performed to assess variation by demographic characteristics. Among the full sample of 6,835 individuals, when asked directly, 30.93% (n = 2,108) of participants indicated that they had ever experienced FOV and 41.73% (n = 2,846) indicated that they had ever experienced IPV. However, when asked about experiences of FOV using the second nuanced question, 43.18% (n = 2,675) responded in ways that indicated that they had ever experienced FOV and 60.71% (n = 3,716) with respect to IPV. The recognition of violence, as indicated by responses to the direct question varied by numerous characteristics, including age, gender and educational attainment. These findings indicate some LGBTQ people may struggle to recognise or name their family or relationship experiences as abusive or violent, which may complicate their ability or willingness to access professional support. More expansive framings, policies and responses to IPV and FOV are required.

Citation

Bourne, A., Amos, N., Donovan, C., Carman, M., Parsons, M., Lusby, S., …Hill, A. O. (2023). Naming and recognition of intimate partner violence and family of origin violence among LGBTQ communities in Australia. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 38(5-6), 4589-4615. https://doi.org/10.1177/08862605221119722

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 20, 2022
Online Publication Date Aug 29, 2022
Publication Date 2023-03
Deposit Date Jul 25, 2022
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Journal Journal of Interpersonal Violence
Print ISSN 0886-2605
Electronic ISSN 1552-6518
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 38
Issue 5-6
Pages 4589-4615
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/08862605221119722

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Accepted Journal Article (417 Kb)
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Copyright Statement
This contribution has been accepted for publication in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.




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