Trapped in housing insecurity: Socioecological barriers to housing access experienced by intimate partner violence survivors from marginalized communities

IF 2 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of community psychology Pub Date : 2023-05-12 DOI:10.1002/jcop.23052
Shanti J. Kulkarni, Heidi Notario
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Abstract

Homelessness and intimate partner violence (IPV) do not impact all communities equally. Survivors from marginalized communities—that is communities that have been historically and structurally excluded from social, economic, and political resources—face additional challenges weathering IPV and housing crises. Understanding the housing experiences of marginalized survivors is necessary to achieve housing equity for all survivors. Community-based participatory research methods were utilized to convene 14 listening sessions (7 primary/7 validation) with Black and Latinx IPV survivors with intersectional identities (n = 92). Listening sessions were held in community-based locations including a church, health clinic, social service agency, and private residence. The last five validation sessions were conducted virtually on Zoom due to COVID pandemic protocols. All listening sessions were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim. Latinx population listening sessions were conducted in Spanish and were implemented and translated with attention to linguistic justice principles. The research team used a modified constructivist grounded theory approach for data analysis. Four overarching themes (and seven subthemes) related to survivors' housing experiences emerged: (1) safety and healing challenges, including living in unhealthy physical environments, not being safe in their homes, and contending with community violence, sexual exploitation threats, and eviction fears; (2) formal service fragmentation/bureaucracy that hampered access to housing resource information and resources; (3) resource scarcity associated with limited affordable housing stock; and (4) systemic oppression resulting from discriminatory treatment and gentrification. Comprehensive multileveled approaches are needed to disrupt the cycle of housing insecurity for IPV survivors from marginalized communities.

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受困于住房不安全:来自边缘化社区的亲密伴侣暴力幸存者在获得住房方面遇到的社会生态障碍。
无家可归和亲密伴侣暴力 (IPV) 对所有社区的影响并不相同。来自边缘化社区(即历史上和结构上被排除在社会、经济和政治资源之外的社区)的幸存者在应对 IPV 和住房危机时面临更多挑战。要实现所有幸存者的住房公平,就必须了解边缘化幸存者的住房经历。我们采用基于社区的参与式研究方法,与具有交叉身份的黑人和拉美裔 IPV 幸存者(n = 92)召开了 14 次倾听会(7 次初选/7 次验证)。倾听会在社区地点举行,包括教堂、诊所、社会服务机构和私人住宅。根据 COVID 大流行协议,最后五场验证会议在 Zoom 上以虚拟方式进行。所有倾听会都进行了数字录音和逐字记录。拉美裔人群聆听会以西班牙语进行,在实施和翻译过程中注重语言公正原则。研究小组采用了经过修改的建构主义基础理论方法进行数据分析。出现了与幸存者住房经历相关的四个首要主题(和七个次主题):(1)安全和康复挑战,包括生活在不健康的物质环境中、在家中不安全、应对社区暴力、性剥削威胁和被驱逐的恐惧;(2)正规服务分散/官僚主义阻碍了获取住房资源信息和资源;(3)与有限的可负担住房存量相关的资源稀缺;以及(4)歧视性待遇和贵族化导致的系统性压迫。需要采取多层次的综合方法来打破来自边缘化社区的 IPV 幸存者住房无保障的恶性循环。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
8.70%
发文量
195
期刊介绍: The Journal of Community Psychology is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to research, evaluation, assessment and intervention, and review articles that deal with human behavior in community settings. Articles of interest include descriptions and evaluations of service programs and projects, studies of youth, parenting, and family development, methodology and design for work in the community, the interaction of groups in the larger community, and criminals and corrections.
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