Patterns of Repetition, Intermittency, and Harm Escalation in Same-Sex and Mixed-Sex Intimate Partner Violence: An Analysis of 1,000 Days of National Police Records in Sweden

IF 1.4 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY International Criminal Justice Review Pub Date : 2023-10-03 DOI:10.1177/10575677231199047
Marika Dagenbrink, Matthew Bland, Barak Ariel
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Abstract

In recent years more attention has been given to the ways in which mixed-sex and same-sex intimate partner violence (IPV) couples report crimes to the police. Specifically, what patterns of repetition, intermittency between contacts with the police, and harm trajectories over time exist, and are there variations between same-sex and mixed-sex dyads? We explore all eligible IPV reported in Sweden over 1,000 days ( n = 14,939) and use descriptive statistics to examine differences between different victims and offenders. We code IPV offences within three levels of harm recognized by law and develop a tiered approach to harm quantification that supports the growing evidence that not all IPV harm is the same. Based on official records, IPV usually ends following the first contact with the police, as nine out of ten dyads never call again. Variations across cisgender and sexual identity groups exist: Repeat same-sex IPV is not as common as mixed-sex IPV but is reported more quickly to the police after it had occurred once. In the 1,000-day follow-up period, same-sex dyads do not call the police more than four times and the repeated incidents trends seem to be driven primarily by outliers. Moreover, we find an overall pattern of decreasing time intervals between each additional contact, but no overall pattern of escalating severity over time. However, the overall severity trend it driven by female-victim-male-offender dyads: male offenders are more likely to cause escalation of harm, while two out of five male–male repeat IPV experience escalation in harm. We discuss the theoretical and practical implications of these findings, which overall illustrate the importance of observing IPV in typological terms, rather than as a continuum.
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同性和混合性别亲密伴侣暴力的重复、间歇和伤害升级模式:瑞典1000天国家警察记录分析
近年来,人们越来越关注同性和异性伴侣暴力(IPV)伴侣向警方报案的方式。具体来说,与警察接触之间的重复模式,间歇性模式,以及随着时间的推移存在的伤害轨迹,同性和混合性别的二人组之间是否存在差异?我们研究了瑞典在1000天内报告的所有符合条件的IPV (n = 14,939),并使用描述性统计来检查不同受害者和罪犯之间的差异。我们将IPV犯罪划分为法律承认的三个伤害级别,并制定了一种分层的伤害量化方法,以支持越来越多的证据表明并非所有IPV伤害都是相同的。根据官方记录,IPV通常在与警察第一次接触后就结束了,因为十分之九的人再也不会打电话了。异性恋和性身份群体之间存在差异:重复的同性IPV不像混合性别IPV那么常见,但在发生一次后向警方报告的速度更快。在1000天的随访期内,同性伴侣报警次数不超过4次,重复事件的趋势似乎主要是由异常值驱动的。此外,我们发现每次额外接触之间的时间间隔减少的总体模式,但没有随时间升级的总体模式。然而,总体的严重程度趋势是由女性-受害者-男性-犯罪者二组驱动的:男性犯罪者更有可能造成伤害升级,而五分之二的男性-男性重复IPV的伤害升级。我们讨论了这些发现的理论和实践意义,这些发现总体上说明了以类型学术语观察IPV的重要性,而不是作为一个连续体。
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来源期刊
International Criminal Justice Review
International Criminal Justice Review CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
6.20%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: International Criminal Justice Review is a scholarly journal dedicated to presenting system wide trends and problems on crime and justice throughout the world. Articles may focus on a single country or compare issues affecting two or more countries. Both qualitative and quantitative pieces are encouraged, providing they adhere to standards of quality scholarship. Manuscripts may emphasize either contemporary or historical topics. As a peer-reviewed journal, we encourage the submission of articles, research notes, and commentaries that focus on crime and broadly defined justice-related topics in an international and/or comparative context.
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