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JournalISSN: 0886-6708

Violence & Victims 

Springer Nature
About: Violence & Victims is an academic journal published by Springer Nature. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Poison control & Domestic violence. It has an ISSN identifier of 0886-6708. Over the lifetime, 1536 publications have been published receiving 79880 citations. The journal is also known as: violence (traits).


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This phenomenon, which involves employees “ganging up” on a target employee and subjecting him or her to psychological harassment, results in severe psychological and occupational consequences for the victim.
Abstract: In recent years, the existence of a significant problem in workplaces has been documented in Sweden and other countries. It involves employees "ganging up" on a target employee and subjecting him or her to psychological harassment. This "mobbing" behavior results in severe psychological and occupational consequences for the victim. This phenomenon is described, its stages and consequences analyzed. An ongoing program of research and intervention that is currently being supported by the Swedish government is then considered.

1,258 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It seems that characteristics associated with either the husband-offender or the couple have greater utility for assessing the risk of husband to wife violence than characteristics of the wife-victim.
Abstract: The present review involves the evaluation of 97 potential risk markers of husband to wife violence. Using 52 case-comparison studies as the source of data, markers were divided into four categories: consistent risk, inconsistent risk, consistent nonrisk, and risk markers with insufficient data. Based on this classification, it appears that a number of widely held hypotheses about husband to wife violence have little empirical support. Only witnessing violence in the wife's family of origin was consistently associated with being victimized by violence. Furthermore, it seems that characteristics associated with either the husband-offender or the couple have greater utility for assessing the risk of husband to wife violence than characteristics of the wife-victim. Findings are discussed in terms of the methodological and theoretical implications of current research on this form of adult domestic violence.

971 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of the prediction of adolescent aggression, teenage violence, adult violence, and convictions for violence concluded that aggression and violence are elements of a more general antisocial tendency, and that the predictors of aggression andviolence are similar to the predictor of antisocial and criminal behavior in general.
Abstract: The Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development is a prospective longitudinal survey of 411 London males from ages 8 years old to 32 years old. This article investigates the prediction of adolescent aggression (ages 12-14 years old), teenage violence (ages 16-18 years old), adult violence (age 32 years old), and convictions for violence. Generally, the best predictors were measures of economic deprivation, family criminality, poor child-rearing, school failure, hyperactivity-impulsivity-attention deficit, and antisocial child behavior. Similar predictors applied to all four measures of aggression and violence. It is concluded that aggression and violence are elements of a more general antisocial tendency, and that the predictors of aggression and violence are similar to the predictors of antisocial and criminal behavior in general.

733 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The initial version of the scale was administered to 407 men and 207 women at intake into a domestic violence program, and the agreement of men's and women’s reports was low, though the scores on the domination-isolation subscale were significantly correlated.
Abstract: This study describes the initial development of a scale of measurement of psychological maltreatment of women by their male partners. The initial version of the scale was administered to 407 men and 207 women at intake into a domestic violence program. All 58 items of the scale were endorsed by a large enough number of subjects to warrant inclusion in the final instrument. Factor analysis revealed a similar factor structure for the men and women, with dominance-isolation and emotional-verbal abuse factors emerging from the analysis. Intracouple reliability for each item of the scale was examined for the subset of men and women who were cohabiting couples (n = 28). Unsurprisingly, the agreement of men's and women's reports was low, though the scores on the domination-isolation subscale were significantly correlated.

701 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although the short form of the CTS2 does not identify as many cases of partner violence as the full scale, it does identify a large number of cases and if there is insufficient time for the full Scale, can be a useful screening instrument.
Abstract: The revised Conflict Tactics Scales (CTS2) is the most widely used instrument for measuring intimate partner violence. This article presents a short form to enable the CTS2 to be used when testing time is very limited. It also presents procedures that can be used with either the full test or the short form to classify individuals on the basis of severity of behavior toward a partner or by a partner, and to classify couples on the basis of mutuality or symmetry in the behaviors measured by the CTS2. The results indicate that the short form is comparable in validity to the full CTS2. Although the short form does not identify as many cases of partner violence as the full scale, it does identify a large number of cases and if there is insufficient time for the full scale, can be a useful screening instrument.

701 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202353
202257
20215
202034
201955
201866