FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 13, 2007
Contacts:
Edward Dunning, M.S.W., 916-390-6088
Mark Rosenthal, 781-956-1034
Groundbreaking Study Shows Need for Unbiased Domestic Violence Services
March 13/07/Vacaville, CA - Many men
suffer physical abuse from their female partners, live in fear of them, and are
denied help by the domestic violence system, according to a ground-breaking
study recently published in the Journal of Family Violence.
The study describes 190 male callers to a domestic violence hotline, men from
all walks of life who found that resources for males seeking help with an
abusive female partner are virtually nonexistent. It appears to be common for
abusive wives to use controlling behaviors, and they are especially prone to
using their children as pawns to control their husbands. And federally funded
shelters and hotlines commonly deny services to men, and ignore Congress' stated
intent that services are to be provided to victims regardless of gender.
Co-author Edward Dunning explains that the idea for the study was conceived by
Mark Rosenthal, now President of Respecting Accuracy in Domestic Abuse Reporting
(RADAR). "I worked closely with Mark during his term as a member of the
helpline's board. He broached the idea that the data we'd been collecting was
the only data in the world at that time on the characteristics of men who've
been subjected to violence by the women in their lives. He realized that this
data could be an invaluable resource in furthering society's understanding of
the dynamics of family violence."
"The situations described by these callers are hardly surprising to anyone who
has followed high-profile cases of female violence" explains Rosenthal. "Clara
Harris, for example, repeatedly drove over her husband while their daughter
begged her not to kill her father. Men are not the only victims of a system that
refuses to recognize that some women can be abusive. The children in these
families are also victimized when the parent they look to for protection is
denied help for no reason other than having been born male."
Dunning, co-founder of the Family Interventions Project in Vacaville, Calif.
began answering helpline calls shortly after completing a study of men and women
convicted of domestic violence. Both that study and the one just published
explored the dynamics of intimate partner violence using the Duluth Power and
Control Wheel. "Conventional wisdom holds that all domestic violence stems from
male power and control, as evident in DV laws and policies. Both of these
studies strongly indicate that this belief system is incorrect. Females are
equally capable of power and control behaviors."
"Allowing callers to define their own problems in their own words provided a
method of controlling for researcher bias and yielded practical information on
working with males in abusive relationships," says Dunning. After the data had
been collected by Dunning and Jan Brown, the helpline's founder, and Rosenthal
had written custom software for recording the data, researcher Denise Hines,
then of the Univ. of New Hampshire Family Research Laboratory, did statistical
analysis and collaborated with Dunning on authoring the paper.
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