A toxic mix: the impact of COVID-19 lockdown measures on the post-separation experiences of domestic abuse survivors

IF 1.7 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Oona Brooks-Hay, Kristina Saunders, M. Burman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reports of an intensification of domestic abuse under COVID-19 restrictions has been described by the UN as a ‘shadow pandemic’. Drawing upon interviews with domestic abuse survivors (n=11), plus interviews (n=18) and surveys (n=22) with support service providers in Scotland, this article develops a nuanced understanding of how the conditions created by the pandemic interacted with existing experiences of domestic abuse, highlighting the relatively overlooked experiences of survivors who have separated from their abusers. The findings reveal how pandemic conditions triggered, mirrored and amplified experiences and impacts of domestic abuse through the complex interplay between isolation, anxiety, lone-parenting, financial concerns and protective requirements such as mask wearing. Participants described an increase in economic abuse, abuse online and the manipulation of child contact arrangements as the restrictions imposed by the pandemic facilitated perpetrator behaviours. However, survivors’ resilience, coping mechanisms, and in some cases enhanced feelings of safety, were also notable. These findings generate insights into the evolving but persistent nature and dynamics of domestic abuse though the pandemic, including how domestic abuse interacts with, creates, and is compounded by gendered inequalities irrespective of whether survivors have separated from their abuser.
有毒的混合物:COVID-19封锁措施对家庭暴力幸存者分居后经历的影响
关于新冠肺炎限制下家庭虐待加剧的报道被联合国描述为“影子流行病”。本文通过对家庭虐待幸存者(n=11)的采访,加上对苏格兰支持服务提供者的采访(n=18)和调查(n=22),对新冠疫情造成的条件如何与现有的家庭虐待经历相互作用有了微妙的理解,强调了与施虐者分离的幸存者相对被忽视的经历。研究结果揭示了疫情是如何通过隔离、焦虑、独自育儿、经济问题和戴口罩等防护要求之间的复杂相互作用,引发、反映和放大家庭虐待的经历和影响的。与会者描述了经济虐待、网上虐待和操纵儿童接触安排的情况有所增加,因为疫情施加的限制助长了施暴者的行为。然而,幸存者的复原力、应对机制,以及在某些情况下增强的安全感,也值得注意。这些发现深入了解了疫情期间家庭虐待不断演变但持续存在的性质和动态,包括家庭虐待如何与性别不平等相互作用、造成性别不平等以及加剧性别不平等,无论幸存者是否与施虐者分离。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
49
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