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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri

Time: 12:05 pm

Results for violent abuse

1 results found

Author: Hess, Cynthia

Title: Dreams Deferred: A Survey on the Impact of Intimate Partner Violence on Survivors' Education, Careers, and Economic Security

Summary: Intimate partner violence (IPV) - in which one person seeks to control another through psychological, sexual, financial, and/or physical abuse - has long-lasting health, educational, and economic consequences for survivors. Previous research indicates that IPV has substantial economic costs for both survivors and society; one recent study, for example, estimates the lifetime costs of IPV - including the costs of related health problems, lost productivity, and criminal justice costs - at $103,767 for women and $23,414 for men. In addition to these direct costs, survivors experience other effects from IPV that can harm them financially and make it difficult to build economic security, such as lost educational opportunities, diminished ability to work, and loss of control over the choice and timing of childbearing. Understanding the multiple effects of abuse and how they interrelate and shape survivors' ongoing opportunities is critical to developing programs and policies that increase safety and economic security. This report examines the educational, career, and economic effects of intimate partner violence by presenting findings from a survey of 164 survivors developed by the Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR) and administered at transitional housing programs, shelters, and other domestic violence programs in 11 states and the District of Columbia. Though not representative of all survivors, the survey explores the self-reported effects of abuse on survivors in the sample and the resources they find most helpful in addressing the economic effects of intimate partner violence. Nearly all respondents to the survey were women, and 71 percent were between the ages of 25 and 44 (with an average age of 38). Most respondents said they have experienced multiple forms of abuse, and the majority (56 percent) have experienced abuse from more than one partner, often beginning at a young age. Eighty-nine percent are parents; 55 percent have children aged four or younger. The survey reveals how the economic dimensions of abuse permeate survivors' lives, creating a complex set of needs that make it difficult to exit abusive relationships and move forward in recovery. Seventy-three percent of respondents said they had stayed with an abusive partner longer than they wanted or returned to them for economic reasons. Many of those surveyed, however, expressed optimism that with the right resources, they will flourish and thrive.

Details: Washington, DC: Institute for Women's Policy Research, 2018. 53p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed November 23, 2018 at: https://iwpr.org/publications/dreams-deferred-domestic-violence-survey-2018/

Year: 2018

Country: United States

URL: https://iwpr.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/C474_IWPR-Report-Dreams-Deferred.pdf

Shelf Number: 153106

Keywords:
Abuse
Abusive Relationships
Domestic Violence
Economic Costs of Crime
Family Violence
Gender Based Crime
Intimate Partner Violence
Physical Abuse
Spousal Abuse
Survivors
Transitional Housing Programs
Violent Abuse