{"title":"Measuring the violence experienced by sexual minorities: Sampling, data collection strategies, and population heterogeneity","authors":"Tania Lejbowicz, Mathieu Trachman","doi":"10.1177/0759106321995726","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Based on data from the VIRAGE (Violence and Gender Relations: INED, 2015–2016) survey, this article explores reports of violence in minority populations through the case of family violence reported by members of sexual minorities. VIRAGE provides two samples of homo-/bisexual respondents who answered the same questionnaire: a volunteer sample recruited through a communications campaign, who responded via Internet; and respondents to a general population telephone survey who identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual. Sexual identification is a sensitive issue, and surveys of private households do not necessarily capture either all victims of violence or all of those who identify as homosexual or bisexual. The general population sample thus cannot be considered representative of these groups. Lesbian and bisexual women in both samples reported more family violence than gay and bisexual men. Homo-/bisexual respondents in VIRAGE’s convenience sample reported more experiences of violence than those in its general population sample. This difference may be explained by various factors: effects of the data collection mode, and of data collection strategies more generally, as well as the heterogeneity of populations in terms of either exposure to violence or the propensity to report it. We use logistic regression methods to understand these differences, controlling for the differences between the characteristics of the respondents in the two samples. In addition to sociodemographic characteristics, we hypothesized that sexual trajectories and practices of sociability among homosexuals and bisexuals could affect the reporting and perception of violence. After these analyses, differences remain, but to a variable extent depending on sex, sexual identification, and forms of violence. The resulting models explain the differences in reporting between samples for men less well than for women. This result can be interpreted as the consequence of a difference between women’s and men’s exposure to violence: independently of the effects of data collection mode and sampling differences, the high probability that female sexual minorities will experience family violence leads to relatively high reporting in the two samples.","PeriodicalId":210053,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique","volume":"148 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/0759106321995726","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Based on data from the VIRAGE (Violence and Gender Relations: INED, 2015–2016) survey, this article explores reports of violence in minority populations through the case of family violence reported by members of sexual minorities. VIRAGE provides two samples of homo-/bisexual respondents who answered the same questionnaire: a volunteer sample recruited through a communications campaign, who responded via Internet; and respondents to a general population telephone survey who identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual. Sexual identification is a sensitive issue, and surveys of private households do not necessarily capture either all victims of violence or all of those who identify as homosexual or bisexual. The general population sample thus cannot be considered representative of these groups. Lesbian and bisexual women in both samples reported more family violence than gay and bisexual men. Homo-/bisexual respondents in VIRAGE’s convenience sample reported more experiences of violence than those in its general population sample. This difference may be explained by various factors: effects of the data collection mode, and of data collection strategies more generally, as well as the heterogeneity of populations in terms of either exposure to violence or the propensity to report it. We use logistic regression methods to understand these differences, controlling for the differences between the characteristics of the respondents in the two samples. In addition to sociodemographic characteristics, we hypothesized that sexual trajectories and practices of sociability among homosexuals and bisexuals could affect the reporting and perception of violence. After these analyses, differences remain, but to a variable extent depending on sex, sexual identification, and forms of violence. The resulting models explain the differences in reporting between samples for men less well than for women. This result can be interpreted as the consequence of a difference between women’s and men’s exposure to violence: independently of the effects of data collection mode and sampling differences, the high probability that female sexual minorities will experience family violence leads to relatively high reporting in the two samples.
基于VIRAGE (Violence and Gender Relations: ine, 2015-2016)调查的数据,本文通过性少数群体成员报告的家庭暴力案例来探讨少数群体中的暴力报告。VIRAGE提供了两个回答相同问卷的同性恋/双性恋受访者样本:一个是通过交流活动招募的志愿者样本,他们通过互联网回答;以及在电话调查中自称为女同性恋、男同性恋或双性恋的受访者。性别认同是一个敏感的问题,对私人家庭的调查不一定能涵盖所有暴力受害者,也不一定能涵盖所有同性恋或双性恋者。因此,一般人口样本不能被认为是这些群体的代表。两个样本中的女同性恋和双性恋女性都比男同性恋和双性恋男性报告了更多的家庭暴力。VIRAGE便利样本中的同性恋/双性恋受访者比一般人群样本报告了更多的暴力经历。这种差异可以用各种因素来解释:数据收集模式的影响,以及更普遍的数据收集策略的影响,以及人口在遭受暴力或报告暴力倾向方面的异质性。我们使用逻辑回归方法来理解这些差异,控制两个样本中受访者特征之间的差异。除了社会人口学特征外,我们还假设同性恋和双性恋的性轨迹和社交实践可能会影响暴力的报告和感知。在这些分析之后,差异仍然存在,但在不同程度上取决于性别、性别认同和暴力形式。由此产生的模型解释了男性样本之间报告差异的效果不如女性。这一结果可以解释为女性和男性遭受暴力的差异的结果:独立于数据收集模式和抽样差异的影响,女性性少数群体遭受家庭暴力的高概率导致两个样本中的报告率相对较高。