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When Crises CollideHow Intimate Partner Violence and Poverty Intersect to Shape Womens Mental Health and Coping?Boston College, goodmalc{at}bc.edu
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government
Boston College
Boston College Until recently, the connection between intimate partner violence (IPV) and persistent poverty had been largely ignored. Recent research indicates, however, that the two phenomena cooccur at high rates; produce parallel effects; and, in each others presence, constrain coping options. Therefore, both external situational, and internal psychological difficulties are missed when women contending with both poverty and IPV are viewed through the lens of just one or just the other. This article describes mental health consequences for women who contend with both partner violence and poverty. It proposes that the stress, powerlessness, and social isolation at the heart of both phenomena combine to produce posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and other emotional difficulties. The article also introduces the term survival-focused coping to describe womens methods of coping with IPV in the context of poverty and highlights the role that domestic violence advocates, mental health providers, and researchers can play in addressing these tightly intertwined phenomena.
Key Words: women poverty intimate partner violence posttraumatic stress disorder depression social support stress powerlessness survival-focused coping microcontrol
Trauma, Violence, & Abuse, Vol. 10, No. 4,
306-329 (2009) |
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