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DV Conference Report #6: How a Child Grows up to Be an Abuser

2008-02-20
By

Background: The historic, one-of-a-kind conference “From Ideology to Inclusion: Evidence-Based Policy and Intervention in Domestic Violence” was held in Sacramento, California February 15-16 and was a major success. The conference was sponsored by the California Alliance for Families and Children and featured leading domestic violence authorities from around the world.

Many of these researchers are part of the National Family Violence Legislative Resource Center, which is challenging the domestic violence establishment’s stranglehold on the issue. The NFVLRC promotes gender-natural, research-based DV policies.

I have been and will continue to detail the conference and some of the research that was presented there in this blog–to learn more, click here.

Marlene Moretti, PhD (pictured) is a full professor of psychology at Simon Fraser University and currently leads a multisite Canadian Institutes of Health Research New Emerging Team Grant on gender and aggression. She has published extensively in the fields of developmental psychopathology, social-clinical psychology, and intervention. Moretti has served as a member on several government committees working to promote the use of evidence based intervention. She is a coauthor of the book, Girls and Aggression: Contributing Factors and Intervention Principles (Kluwer-Plenum, 2004). Dr. Moretti can be reached at: moretti@sfu.ca.

At the conference, Moretti co-presented the Plenary “Family Roots of Adolescent Violence in Relationships and Effective Interventions: A Developmental and Relational Perspective” with Jennifer Langhinrichsen-Rohling, PhD.

While the current domestic violence paradigm is very dismissive of intimate partner abuse by women, Moretti says both mothers and fathers who engage in violence toward their partners put their children at risk for aggression in their relationships.  Boys and girls who observe their mothers engage in violence toward her partner tend to use more violence in their romantic relationships. As well, girls who observe their mothers violence toward her partner are more likely to be aggressive with their peers; similarly boys who observe their fathers violence toward his partner are more aggressive with their peers. These results are published in Aggressive Behavior, 2006, 32 (4), 385-395.

Moretti also says that boys tend to be more aggressive towards their friends, and girls tend to be more aggressive towards their romantic partners.  She explained that, according to Crime in the US 2001, Table 33, there is an increase in violence by girls and a decrease in violence by boys.

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  • shivers

    Well, there’s nothing new about children who’ve witnessed violence have an increased risk of being perpetrators when adults. But at some stage they are responsible for their own actions. We can’t forever go through our lives blaming our parents or other parental icons on our behaviour.

    However, a worrying factor about articles that allude to the theory that adult men are abusers because they were abused by their mothers is just another avenue to blame a woman (sometimes any woman it would seem) for the actions of a fully grown, who is supposedly responsible for his own actions.

    This article is irresponsible journalism and doesn’t say anything although it uses a lot of big words.

  • http://www.shatterdmen.com/ shatteredmen

    How can we expect real stats when the CDC does not know what it happening even after their own research shows abuse to men has increased by 50% since 1995. (and that is known abuse) I have written to
    Dr. Gerberding of the CDC and of course have not gotten a reply.

    In the recent report “Quarter of U.S. women suffer domestic violence” in which Michele Black, a CDC epidemiologist who helped write the report said: “she could not say whether domestic violence rates were rising. The
    results were comparable with those of a 1995 government survey that
    found that 24.8 percent of women and 7.6 percent of men reported
    suffering domestic violence.

    Please notice Black’s statement: she could not say whether domestic
    violence rates were rising. but look at your own stats.

    1995 government survey that found that 24.8 percent of women and 7.6
    percent of men reported suffering domestic violence.

    Now they say 23.6 percent of women and 11.5 percent of men reported
    being a victim of what it called “intimate partner violence” at some
    time in their lives.

    The rate for women WAS 24.8 and is now 23.6 Ummmm it went DOWN 1.2%
    while it was 7.6% for men and it now 11.5% an INCREASE of 3.9% even
    using the CDC’s stats and she can not tell if the rates were rising?

  • http://www.false-accusers.com TheManOnTheStreet

    Well duhhhhhhhh! Why the hell do you think there is an “increase” in female to male violence? Could it be that their mothers, sisters, aunts, and every other female they practically know got away with it? TV, news, shoot society as a whole for crying out loud, minimises it…. Almost promotes it!

    An “increase” eh? In 2001? Well great googly-moogly! How about looking at the data from… oh, I donno…. say within the last year or so? How about stating the fact that it has been at a STEADY increase since 2001? Partially due to more males reporting of course…. but I digress.

    Dont need some fancy shmancy letters after my name to see that!

    TMOTS







Right.

Man up.

Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

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