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A Eugene
researcher's observations point to young women who initiate physical
fighting
Fingering the aggressor
It's one thing to ask couples how often their
arguments escalate to physical attack. It's another to actually watch
them go at it. Deborah Capaldi has. A senior scientist at Eugene's
Oregon Social Learning Center, Capaldi has spent hours watching young
couples tackle problem-solving exercises in the center's lab assessment
rooms. To the surprise of Capaldi and her colleagues, a partner would
sometimes lash out in the midst of debating how to solve the problem.
Who were the primary initiators of such slaps, pokes and kicks? “The
women,” Capaldi says. Capaldi's and her co-workers' research, slated for
publication in the Journal of Family Violence, found that women age 18
were more than four times as likely as men to initiate physical
aggression. The gap closed by age 26, when women were only slightly more
likely than men to tee off. The counterintuitive findings are among a
growing body of research suggesting that women may play a larger role in
domestic violence than commonly assumed. But the research is also
controversial and subject to interpretation. Capaldi contends that
prevention and treatment programs for battered women often miss the mark
because they fail to consider the realities of female aggression. Women
need to know, for example, that if they assault their partner, they run
a higher risk of severe injury themselves, she said. “Women engage in
aggression,” she said, “and we're not doing them any favors by denying
they have any part in it.” Most advocates for female victims of domestic
violence acknowledge that some women are aggressors and some men are
victims. But they caution that the dynamics are often very different,
the options for escape much narrower, and the risk of physical injury or
death far greater for women.
“The most common cause of injury for women between the
ages of 15 and 44 is domestic violence — you don't see that for men,”
said Margo Schaefer, community outreach director at Womenspace, a Eugene
shelter and support group for battered women. “What it's like to be a
battered man is not well-known, and it's important to reach out to those
men,” Schaefer said. “But with women, we have an epidemic on our hands.”
The most crucial distinction between male and female aggressors, say
Schaefer and other advocates for battered women, is this: Women are more
likely to use force as a way to focus attention on unmet needs and
frustrations, while men are more likely to use it as a fear and control
tactic. Because of the disparity in physical size and strength, women
often end up battered by men regardless of whether they resist or
comply, Schaefer said. As for the potential of greater injury should
they strike first, “no one needs to tell a battered woman that if she
mixes it up with a batterer, she's going to get the worst of it.”
According to federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, about one in three
female murder victims in this country is killed by an “intimate” — a
spouse, ex-spouse or boyfriend. The rate is actually down somewhat today
compared with the 1980s and '90s. Only 3 percent to 4 percent of male
murder victims, meanwhile, are killed by an intimate. The raw number of
men murdered by intimates dropped 71 percent from 1976 to 2002, the
bureau reports.
In Oregon, a five-year Intimate Partner Violence Project study completed
by the state last year found women were three times more likely than men
to be assaulted by a partner, and four times more likely to be killed.
One in 10 women in Oregon ages 20 to 55 had experienced physical or
sexual violence by an intimate partner in the previous five years, the
study found. More than 100 academic studies, however, suggest that men
and women assault their partners at about equal rates. Male victims
typically fail to gain much attention, advocates say, because of strong
cultural biases that men are expected to take abuse “like a man” and not
complain, and because many men are too embarrassed to admit abuse.
There's also the notion that political correctness — in which only women
go to shelters, and only men go to treatment programs — may be at play.
“People have put a great deal of energy into establishing those shelters
and treatment programs — the status quo,” Capaldi said. “It's become an
industry.”
Seeing is believing?
Capaldi, a researcher at Oregon Social Learning Center since 1983, said
her work on female aggression came about by accident. She's devoted much
of her career to the Oregon Youth Study, a two-decade assessment of more
than 200 males from mostly lower-income homes. The males were first
interviewed as fourth-graders and have been visited annually ever since;
they are now in their late 20s. As they entered their late teens, most
had acquired girlfriends or wives, and Capaldi and associates expanded
their research to include a couples study. A large majority of the
couples aren't involved in any physical violence, Capaldi stressed. In
most studies on the topic, she said, between one-quarter and one-third
of men and women admit to having physically struck a partner at least
once in the previous year. In a 2001 study of her own, Capaldi reported
frequent levels of physical aggression by both the male and female in 8
percent of interviewed couples, by just the woman in 5 percent of the
couples, and by just the man in 1 percent of the couples. Among 86
percent of the couples, neither the man nor woman committed frequent
aggression. Capaldi's latest study, however, is different in that it
focuses on observed rather than reported acts of aggression. Capaldi
said she and her colleagues expected some verbal arguments but were
surprised by the extent of slaps, pokes and kicks as partners discussed
such assigned topics as planning a party, where to go on a date, or how
to deal with such issues as jealousy and lack of money. If hit or poked,
the men and women were about equally as likely to respond in kind. None
of the physical aggression was severe, which researchers would have
halted, Capaldi said. Some women may initiate aggression because they
see it as a kind of innocent horseplay and as a way to connect in a
sexually intimate relationship, Capaldi said. Younger women, especially,
may be less sure of how to relate, and more susceptible to jealousy
because they are unsure of the relationship's staying power, she said.
Depression is another potential factor, with some people choosing to
cope aggressively rather than passively, she said. Many partners seemed
to engage in the slaps and pokes without even consciously thinking about
it, Capaldi said. “It was almost like a way of communicating,” she said.
Two-way aggression
Teri Gutierrez, director of Non-Violent Alternatives, a batterer
intervention program in Springfield, has her own theory about why many
young women may take the initiative in physical aggression.
“What I see with younger women is, they don't want to be seen as a
victim, and so they put on this tough persona,” Gutierrez said. “But
when it comes down to who's really in control, that's a harder thing to
assess. It may look like a woman is being bossy or emotionally abusive,
but that does not necessarily mean she's the primary aggressor.”
Gutierrez said many male batterers are skilled at manipulating a partner
and getting her to hit first in order to blame her. Many men, she said,
are also skilled at being on their best behavior when they know they're
being observed — in a laboratory setting, for example. While some women
are the sole aggressor, mutual aggression is more common, Gutierrez
said. Some women who suffer physical abuse think they “deserve” it
because of their own aggressive actions. Gutierrez recalled two women
served by her agency who became agitated whenever it was suggested they
might be the victim in their relationships. “They really believed that
if they weren't abusive, he wouldn't have been abusive to them,”
Gutierrez said. “They thought their behavior was so egregious, who
wouldn't have hit them back?” It's not as if Gutierrez's agency, called
NOVA for short, hasn't tried to address the problem of female
aggression: The agency sponsored a female “primary aggressor” program in
2000 and again last year, but struggled both times to find enough
willing participants to justify the effort. A “female aggression wheel”
used in the program lists the various ways some women will abuse a male
partner — from spitting, pulling hair and throwing objects to such
psychological devices as “crying to make him feel guilty” or “trying to
make him jealous.”
Many women are reluctant to admit their culpability in a culture that
views aggressive females as less acceptable than aggressive males,
Gutierrez said. “You hear of a woman being violent, it's shocking to
people and viewed as aberrant behavior that should be punished,” she
said. “There's maybe less empathy for a woman who's aggressive or mouthy
or addicted or cheating.”
“Men get battered, too”
When a man tells her he is a victim of domestic violence, Gutierrez said
she asks two questions: How does he benefit from staying in the
relationship, and what's preventing him from leaving? The point, she
said, is that most men have fewer barriers — such as insufficient
finances or primary child care duties — blocking them. Female aggressors
differ from male aggressors in several ways. For one, women are more
likely to see their aggression as a problem that needs fixing, Gutierrez
said.
Schaefer, at Womenspace, identifies another difference: Women who batter
men rarely pursue contact after separation, while men are much more
likely to stalk or harass a past partner. Despite the differences, it's
important to remember that anyone can be a victim of domestic violence,
Schaefer said. The idea that men are somehow immune to physical assault
or isolation or ridicule is ludicrous, she said.
“A lot of women abuse men by telling them they're not man enough —
`Look, you won't even hit back when I hit you,' ” Schaefer said. “If
you're a man who's not going to hit back, then a very positive thing
about you can be turned into a source of ridicule against you.”
Womenspace does not offer support groups for male victims, but otherwise
provides the same services, including emergency shelter, to battered men
and women. Male victims are directed to hotels or other safe havens,
distinct from the confidential emergency shelter made available to
women. When someone reminds her that “men get battered, too,” Schaefer
said her immediate response is to agree.
“It's an underserved population,” she said. “Pretty
much everyone is underserved when it comes to domestic violence.”
Jeff Wright
29 January 2005
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2005/01/29/a1.dvresearch.0129.html
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