000 02204nab a22003137a 4500
999 _c4913
_d4913
005 20250625151407.0
008 160125s2011 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aBonomi, Amy E.
_95439
245 _a"Meet me at the hill where we used to park" :
_binterpersonal processes associated with victim recantation
_c Amy E. Bonomi, Rashmi Gangamma, Chris R. Locke, Heather Katafiasz, & David Martin
260 _bElsevier,
_c2011
500 _aSocial Science & Medicine, 2011, 73(7): 1054-1061
500 _aRecommended reading
520 _aThis study used live telephone conversations between domestic violence perpetrators and victims to answer novel questions about how and why victims arrive at their decision to recant and/or refuse prosecution efforts. From October 2008 to June 2011, the researchers conducted a qualitative study involving 25 heterosexual couples, where the male perpetrator was being held in a Detention Facility (in the United States) for felony-level domestic violence and made telephone calls to his female victim during the pre-prosecution period. The researchers used 30–192 minutes of conversational data for each couple to examine: 1) interpersonal processes associated with the victim’s intention to recant; and 2) the couple’s construction of the recantation plan once the victim intended to recant. The researchers used constructivist grounded theory to guide data analysis, which allowed for the construction of a novel recantation framework, while acknowledging the underlying coercive interpersonal dynamic. (From the abstract). Record #4913
650 _aRECOMMENDED READING
_96431
650 _aABUSED WOMEN
_925
650 _aABUSIVE MEN
_926
650 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 5 _9237
_aEVIDENCE
650 _aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_9431
650 _aJUSTICE
_9333
650 _aPERPETRATORS
_92644
650 4 _aVICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9624
651 4 _aUNITED STATES
_92646
773 0 _tSocial Science & Medicine, 2011, 73(7): 1054-1061
830 _aSocial Science & Medicine
_95308
856 _uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.07.005
_zRead the abstract
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE