期刊
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY APPLIED TO LEGAL CONTEXT
卷 11, 期 2, 页码 61-69出版社
SOCIEDAD ESPANOLA PSICOLOGIA JURIDICA FORENSE
DOI: 10.5093/ejpalc2019a1
关键词
Intimate partner violence; Psychological aggression; Ecological framework; Sexist attitudes; Inmates
资金
- FEDER founds from Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [MINECO-17-PSI2016-77484-P]
- Foundation for the Promotion in Asturias of Applied Scientific Research and Technology (FICYT, Asturias, Spain) [BP14153]
Psychological intimate partner violence (IPV) is the most prevalent form of IPV and is often thought to precede physical IPV. However, psychological IPV often occurs independently of other forms of IPV, and it can often emerge during routine relationship interactions. Using data from imprisoned male offenders we investigate the effect of hostile and benevolent sexist attitudes on psychological IPV and the hypothesized mediating role of positive attitudes toward IPV and this effect when accounting for broader risk factors at the levels of community (social disorder), family-of-origin (conflictive climate in family of origin), and personality (antisocial personality traits) variables. The sample involved 196 male inmates of the Penitentiary Center of Villabona (Asturias, Spain). Structural equation models result showed significant total, direct and indirect effect of hostile sexism on psychological IPV, but not of benevolent sexism. When individual, family-of-origin, and community variables were considered, however, hostile sexism showed only an indirect effect on psychological IPV via positive attitudes toward abuse. These results are discussed in light of the debate of the role of sexist attitudes in the psychological IPV explanation when broader models are considered.
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