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Lyndal Khaw

Researcher at Montclair State University

Publications -  23
Citations -  503

Lyndal Khaw is an academic researcher from Montclair State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Domestic violence & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 20 publications receiving 403 citations. Previous affiliations of Lyndal Khaw include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Theorizing the Process of Leaving: Turning Points and Trajectories in the Stages of Change*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted secondary data analysis of interviews with 19 mothers who left their abusive husbands and found that turning points marked mothers' movements from one stage of change to another, resulting in linear and nonlinear trajectories of leaving.
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Lesbian/Bisexual Mothers and Intimate Partner Violence: Help Seeking in the Context of Social and Legal Vulnerability

TL;DR: Twenty-four lesbian/bisexual mothers who were either in or had left abusive same-sex relationships were interviewed, finding decisions to seek formal help appeared to be influenced by their support from informal networks and perceived stigma related to the intersection of IPV and being lesbian or bisexual.
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Coparenting relationships after divorce: Variations by type of marital violence and fathers' role differentiation

TL;DR: This paper examined coparenting relationships for 25 divorced mothers who experienced domestic violence during their marriages and found that former husbands were able to differentiate, or keep separate, their parental and spousal roles and that their role was related to type of marital violence.
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Coercive Control and Abused Women’s Decisions About Their Pets When Seeking Shelter

TL;DR: Two patterns emerged surrounding abusers’ treatment of pets, bonds to pets, women’s decisions about pets upon seeking shelter, and future plans for pets: the presence of coercive control was central to these patterns.
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Marital Violence and Coparenting Quality After Separation

TL;DR: Patterns of association between study variables and coparenting quality showed some parallels between the SCV and NV groups, and for CCV, postseparation harassment and fear were negatively associated with coparents quality.