000 04178nab a22003257a 4500
005 20250714115805.0
008 220307s2018 ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aZeoli, April M.
_95437
245 _aDomestic violence and firearms :
_cApril M. Zeoli
_bresearch on statutory interventions
260 _bBattered Women's Justice Project,
_c2018
_aMinneapolis, MN :
300 _aelectronic document (18 pages) ; PDF file
520 _aThe crimes of domestic and dating violence and stalking are pervasive in our society. When a violent intimate partner has access to a firearm, a dangerous situation becomes a potentially fatal situation (Bailey, et al., 1997; Campbell, et al., 2003; Kellerman, et al., 1993). More women are killed by their intimate partners than by any other offender group, and firearms are the weapon most often used in intimate partner homicide (Cooper & Smith, 2011; Fox & Fridel, 2017). In 2015, of cases with known offenders, roughly 51% of female homicide victims and 6% of male homicide victims were killed by their intimate partners. Overall, fifty-five percent of these homicides were committed with firearms, however firearm use varied by gender of the victim: 58% of female victims were killed with firearms, whereas 46% of male victims were (United States Department of Justice & Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2017). There is ample evidence that firearms are used in nonfatal domestic violence, as well. This evidence comes from surveys of samples of intimate partner violence survivors and perpetrators, as well as the general population of the United States. Thirty-seven percent of women in domestic violence shelters report that their intimate partners used firearms against them (Sorenson & Wiebe, 2004). Roughly 3% of men enrolled in batterers intervention programs in reported that they threatened, intimidated, or shot at their partners with a firearm (Rothman, Hemenway, Miller, & Azrael, 2005). Finally, a nationally representative survey, the National Crime Victimization Survey, found that firearms were used in 3.4% of nonfatal incidents of intimate partner violence (Truman & Morgan, 2014). Additionally, when a violent intimate partner has access to a firearm, nonfatal abuse may increase in severity (Zeoli, Malinski, & Turchan, 2016), even when firearms are not directly used in a violent incident. A study of partner-victimized pregnant women found that 41% of their partners owned firearms, 17% of whom kept their firearms “on” them. Using multiple different measurement scales to measure abuse severity, the researchers found consistent evidence that partner access to firearms increased abuse severity (McFarlane, et al., 1998). A study of male domestic violence offenders involved in the Canadian criminal justice system found that access to a firearm was significantly associated with the severity of intimate partner assaults despite the fact that very few of the assaults actually involved firearms (Folkes, Hilton, & Harris, 2013). In a study of women in battered women’s shelters, researchers found that offenders who used firearms against victims also used significantly more types of other weapons than those who did not use firearms (Sorenson & Wiebe, 2004). This may indicate that violent intimates who have access to firearms are particularly high-risk individuals. (Author's abstract). Record #7554
650 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 _aCOERCIVE CONTROL
_95771
650 _aFEMICIDE
_98292
650 _aGUNS
_97212
650 _aHOMICIDE
_9297
650 _aINTERVENTION
_9326
650 _aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_9431
650 _aLITERATURE REVIEWS
_9350
650 _aPERPETRATORS
_92644
650 _aPROTECTION ORDERS
_9470
650 4 _aVICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9624
651 _aINTERNATIONAL
_93624
651 4 _aUNITED STATES
_92646
856 _uhttps://iwpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Zeoli-Domestic-Violence-and-Firearms-Research-on-Statut.pdf
_zDownload peper, PDF
856 _uhttps://www.preventdvgunviolence.org/
_zThe National Resource Center on Domestic Violence and Firearms website
942 _2ddc
_cBRIEFING
999 _c7554
_d7554