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Expected Consequences of Male Violence Against Their Female Dating Partners

NCJ Number
174337
Journal
Journal of Interpersonal Violence Volume: 12 Issue: 2 Dated: April 1997 Pages: 229-240
Author(s)
D S Riggs; M B Caulfield
Date Published
1997
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This article examines male college students' expected consequences of their physical violence against female dating partners, and the association of those expected consequences with the actual use of violence in the men's current dating relationships.
Abstract
Violent men were significantly more likely than nonviolent men to expect that violence would result in their winning the argument that had precipitated the violence, whereas nonviolent men were more likely to believe that the use of violence would result in an end to the relationship. Expected consequences were also associated with the frequency/severity of self-reported aggressive behavior within the aggressive group. The item assessing the expectation that a partner would call police subsequent to the aggression loaded on a factor defined by items indicating that the perpetrator wins the argument. This item loaded positively on this factor, which was more highly endorsed by aggressive men, possibly reflecting the actual result of a previous aggressive incident. Tables, figure, references

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