Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 14
pro vyhledávání: '"Kendra L. Nixon"'
Publikováno v:
Violence Against Women. :107780122311743
Bagwell-Gray et al. developed a taxonomy of intimate partner sexual violence (IPSV) focusing on type of force (physical or nonphysical) and type of sexual activity (penetration or no penetration). The current secondary descriptive qualitative analysi
Publikováno v:
Violence Against Women. :107780122311664
Relatively little research has examined men's use of coercive controlling tactics against female partners after separation. This mixed-methods secondary analysis of 346 Canadian women documented coercive controlling tactics used by their ex-partners
Autor:
Mary Ruklos Hampton, H. Lorraine Radtke, Leslie M. Tutty, Christine A. Ateah, E. Jane Ursel, Wilfreda E. Billie Thurston, Kendra L. Nixon
Publikováno v:
Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma. 30:1125-1147
This 2.5-year longitudinal, Canadian tri-provincial study (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba) of women abused by intimate partners examined the nature of the partner abuse, physical and mental condit...
Autor:
Leslie M. Tutty, Kendra L. Nixon
Publikováno v:
Violence against women. 28(6-7)
Studies of intimate partner sexual assault (IPSA) and its effects on mental health are limited. This secondary data analysis examines IPSA, a history of child sexual abuse, depression, trauma, mental distress and quality of life in 665 Canadian women
Publikováno v:
The Northern Review.
Housing affordability is a significant and growing issue across northern Manitoba communities. One population impacted by the lack of safe and affordable housing is women (and their children) leaving violent and abusive relationships. Through in-dept
Autor:
Wilfreda E. Billie Thurston, Christine A. Ateah, Kendra L. Nixon, Mary Hampton, Leslie M. Tutty, H. Lorraine Radtke, E. Jane Ursel
Publikováno v:
Violence against women. 26(12-13)
Intimate partner violence (IPV), mental health, disabilities, and child abuse history were examined for 292 Indigenous compared with 295 non-Indigenous Canadian women. IPV was assessed by the Composite Abuse Scale and mental health by the Symptom Che
Publikováno v:
Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 34:3107-3126
Intimate partner violence (IPV) has many negative outcomes for women, children, and families. However, researchers have opposing perspectives and findings with respect to the effects on mothering for abused women. The assumption by some service provi
Publikováno v:
Violence Against Women. 23:1271-1292
Exposure to intimate partner violence is detrimental to children, but can abused mothers protect them, and, if so, what can they do? This study of 350 Canadian abused women represents the first quantitative examination of such protective strategies.
Publikováno v:
Child Abuse Review. 26:63-74
Many children are exposed to intimate partner violence against their mothers. Countering assumptions that abused women 'fail to protect' their children, this paper presents the results of a Canadian qualitative study that examined the protective stra
Autor:
Leslie M. Tutty, Kendra L. Nixon
Publikováno v:
Children and Youth Services Review. 115:105090
In Western Canada, 504 mothers with children 18 years and younger participated in a study of the impacts of intimate partner violence (IPV). Of these, 68 (13.5%) had children currently taken into either temporary or permanent care by child protective