“Your skin crawled every time he touched you” : Leslie M. Tutty, Cindy Ogden and Kendra L. Nixon a secondary qualitative analysis exploring Bagwell-Gray's taxonomy of intimate partner sexual violence
By: Tutty, Leslie M.
Contributor(s): Ogden, Cindy | Nixon, Kendra L.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Violence Against Women.Publisher: Sage, 2024Subject(s): ABUSED WOMEN | COERCIVE CONTROL | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | SEXUAL VIOLENCE | VICTIM/SURVIVORS' VOICES | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | VICTIMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE | INTERNATIONAL | Online resources: DOI: 10.1177/10778012231174352 (Open access) In: Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(12-13): 3211-3233Summary: 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 analysis of interviews with 89 Canadian women IPV victims assessed IPSV that fit Bagwell-Gray's taxonomy. About half (46 or 51.7%) described sexual violence, most commonly sexual abuse (26 or 29.2%), sexual assaults (17 or 19%), and sexual coercion (16 or 17.9%), with overlap across categories. Forced sexual activity was seldom mentioned (3 or 3.4%). Implications for service providers and researchers are provided. (Authors' abstract). Record #8184Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON23050047 |
Violence Against Women, 2024, 30(12-13): 3211-3233
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 analysis of interviews with 89 Canadian women IPV victims assessed IPSV that fit Bagwell-Gray's taxonomy. About half (46 or 51.7%) described sexual violence, most commonly sexual abuse (26 or 29.2%), sexual assaults (17 or 19%), and sexual coercion (16 or 17.9%), with overlap across categories. Forced sexual activity was seldom mentioned (3 or 3.4%). Implications for service providers and researchers are provided. (Authors' abstract). Record #8184