Considering context: Current relationship satisfaction in a second‐generation model of men's physical intimate partner violence

Despite a half‐century of scholarship devoted to explicating and disrupting the intergenerational transmission of family violence, it remains a prominent and destructive social force in the United States. Theoretical models have posited a variety of historical and concurrent risk and protective fact...

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Veröffentlicht in:Family process 2024-12, Vol.63 (4), p.2400-2415
Hauptverfasser: Slep, Amy M. Smith, Heyman, Richard E., Daly, Kelly A., Baucom, Katherine J. W.
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container_issue 4
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creator Slep, Amy M. Smith
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Daly, Kelly A.
Baucom, Katherine J. W.
description Despite a half‐century of scholarship devoted to explicating and disrupting the intergenerational transmission of family violence, it remains a prominent and destructive social force in the United States. Theoretical models have posited a variety of historical and concurrent risk and protective factors implicated in the trajectory from childhood violence exposure to adult perpetration. Using a second‐generation model of intimate partner violence (IPV), we integrated social learning and attachment conceptualizations to examine pathways from family‐of‐origin violence to IPV perpetration among adult men. A sample of mixed‐sex couples (N = 233) completed self‐report measures related to social learning and attachment‐based factors (e.g., violence in past relationships, child exposure, IPV attitudes, adult attachment) and participated in a 10‐min conversation about a desired area for change in their relationship. Following, each partner participated in a video‐mediated‐recall procedure assessing their anger volatility and eliciting attributions of their partners' behavior. We tested mediation pathways (consistent with social learning and attachment theories) between violence in men's families of origin and their adult IPV perpetration as a function of relationship satisfaction. The proposed model fit the data well (CFI = 0.95) but had notable modifications from the hypothesized model. Generally, social‐learning pathways were more consistent with the data. Relationship satisfaction interacted with some parameters. Results support theoretical advances in understanding IPV. Although exposure to violence in men's family of origin confers risk for later IPV, and a social learning developmental pathway is consistent with results, some of these effects are altered by relationship context.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/famp.13010
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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; Access via Wiley Online Library; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Adult
Adults
Anger
Attachment
Attribution
Childhood
Domestic violence
Families & family life
Family of origin
Female
Humans
Intergenerational relationships
Intergenerational transmission
Interpersonal Relations
Intimate partner violence
Intimate Partner Violence - psychology
Male
Men
Middle Aged
Mixed gender
Models, Psychological
Object Attachment
Personal Satisfaction
Protective factors
Relationship satisfaction
Risk Factors
second‐generation theories
Sexual Partners - psychology
Social Learning
United States
Young Adult
title Considering context: Current relationship satisfaction in a second‐generation model of men's physical intimate partner violence
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