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Baby don't hurt me : victimization and perpetration experiences of offline and online intimate partner violence

Janneke M. Schokkenbroek (UGent) , Wim Hardyns (UGent) and Koen Ponnet (UGent)
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Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a highly prevalent phenomenon. While many studies have identified patterns of IPV victimization of women and perpetration by men, female perpetration and male victimization experiences are often overlooked. Additionally, most previous research among representative samples has focused on the occurrence of physical forms of IPV, often neglecting other forms of partner violence such as psychological or cyber (i.e., the use of online means to control the behaviour of one’s partner) IPV. In the present study, associations between and prevalence rates of victimization and perpetration experiences of physical, sexual, psychological and cyber partner violence were examined among a representative sample of adults. Additionally, we examined differences between men and women in these experiences. To do so, we conducted a survey study among a representative sample of citizens of Ghent. Of the total sample (n = 1587), 1144 (51.3% women, Mage = 47.7 years) were in a romantic relationship. IPV prevalence rates ranged from 4.0% to 60.1%, depending on the form of IPV. We found significant associations between all measured IPV experiences: between experiences of different forms of IPV (ranging from r = .220 to r = .472) as well as between victimization and perpetration experiences (ranging from r = .384 to r = .604). Additionally, we found significant differences between men and women for sexual IPV perpetration (men > women), psychological IPV victimization (men > women) and perpetration (women > men), and for cyber IPV victimization (men > women).

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MLA
Schokkenbroek, Janneke M., et al. “Baby Don’t Hurt Me : Victimization and Perpetration Experiences of Offline and Online Intimate Partner Violence.” BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts, 2021.
APA
Schokkenbroek, J. M., Hardyns, W., & Ponnet, K. (2021). Baby don’t hurt me : victimization and perpetration experiences of offline and online intimate partner violence. BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, UCLouvain (online conference).
Chicago author-date
Schokkenbroek, Janneke M., Wim Hardyns, and Koen Ponnet. 2021. “Baby Don’t Hurt Me : Victimization and Perpetration Experiences of Offline and Online Intimate Partner Violence.” In BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Schokkenbroek, Janneke M., Wim Hardyns, and Koen Ponnet. 2021. “Baby Don’t Hurt Me : Victimization and Perpetration Experiences of Offline and Online Intimate Partner Violence.” In BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts.
Vancouver
1.
Schokkenbroek JM, Hardyns W, Ponnet K. Baby don’t hurt me : victimization and perpetration experiences of offline and online intimate partner violence. In: BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts. 2021.
IEEE
[1]
J. M. Schokkenbroek, W. Hardyns, and K. Ponnet, “Baby don’t hurt me : victimization and perpetration experiences of offline and online intimate partner violence,” in BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts, UCLouvain (online conference), 2021.
@inproceedings{8709695,
  abstract     = {{Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a highly prevalent phenomenon. While many studies have identified patterns of IPV victimization of women and perpetration by men, female perpetration and male victimization experiences are often overlooked. Additionally, most previous research among representative samples has focused on the occurrence of physical forms of IPV, often neglecting other forms of partner violence such as psychological or cyber (i.e., the use of online means to control the behaviour of one’s partner) IPV. In the present study, associations between and prevalence rates of victimization and perpetration experiences of physical, sexual, psychological and cyber partner violence were examined among a representative sample of adults. Additionally, we examined differences between men and women in these experiences. To do so, we conducted a survey study among a representative sample of citizens of Ghent. Of the total sample (n = 1587), 1144 (51.3% women, Mage = 47.7 years) were in a romantic relationship. IPV prevalence rates ranged from 4.0% to 60.1%, depending on the form of IPV. We found significant associations between all measured IPV experiences: between experiences of different forms of IPV (ranging from r = .220 to r = .472) as well as between victimization and perpetration experiences (ranging from r = .384 to r = .604). Additionally, we found significant differences between men and women for sexual IPV perpetration (men > women), psychological IPV victimization (men > women) and perpetration (women > men), and for cyber IPV victimization (men > women).}},
  author       = {{Schokkenbroek, Janneke M. and Hardyns, Wim and Ponnet, Koen}},
  booktitle    = {{BAPS 2021, Annual Meeting of the ​Belgian Association of Psychological Sciences, Abstracts}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  location     = {{UCLouvain (online conference)}},
  pages        = {{1}},
  title        = {{Baby don't hurt me : victimization and perpetration experiences of offline and online intimate partner violence}},
  url          = {{https://www.baps2021.be/}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}