TY - SER AU - Brown, Cynthia AU - Flood, Michael AU - Hegarty, Kelsey TI - Digital dating abuse perpetration and impact : : the importance of gender PY - 2020/// PB - Taylor & Francis, KW - ADOLESCENT RELATIONSHIP ABUSE KW - DATING VIOLENCE KW - GENDER KW - INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE KW - ONLINE HARASSMENT KW - PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS KW - QUALITATIVE RESEARCH KW - TECHNOLOGY-FACILITATED ABUSE KW - YOUNG PEOPLE KW - INTERNATIONAL KW - AUSTRALIA N1 - Journal of Youth Studies, 2020, Advance online publication, 16 December 2020 N2 - Although measurement and prevalence of digital dating abuse (DDA) in young people’s relationships is of growing research interest, youth perceptions of the behaviours and the impact on victims are yet to be fully understood. This study explored thirty-eight (16–24 year old) youth’s perceptions of DDA behaviours and descriptors of the emotional impact of the behaviours on victims. A predominant theme of gender differences emerged, with five subthemes: (a) men tend to engage in sexual-related behaviours, (b) men and women undertake different controlling and monitoring behaviours, (c) the role of reputation shapes the impact on men, (d) serious negative emotions characterise the impact on women, and (e) some men misconceive the severity of the impact on women. Findings move discussions beyond DDA prevalence and frequency to reveal that young people perceive DDA to have significant emotional consequences for victims and that there are gender differences in the perpetration and impact of DDA. These perspectives provide a valuable contribution to the development of gender-sensitive DDA measures, DDA prevention initiatives and support programmes for youth experiencing DDA. (Authors' abstract). Record #7003 UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2020.1858041 ER -