Based on an integrative
framework, this study addresses the beliefs that a group of social work
students from Taiwan had about wife beating. A self-administered questionnaire
was filled out by 790 students (76.5% female, 23.5% male) spanning all 4 years of
undergraduate studies.
The results show that male students exhibited a greater
tendency than their female counterparts to justify wife beating and to hold
battered women responsible for violence against them. This tendency was also
found among students who held traditional attitudes toward women, students who
held patriarchal expectations of marriage, and students who had witnessed
interparental violence in childhood. In addition, male students and students
with traditional attitudes toward women exhibited the strongest tendency to
believe that wives benefit from beating.
Conversely, female students expressed
more willingness than their male counterparts to help battered women, as did
students who held liberal attitudes toward women and students who held egalitarian
expectations of marriage. Furthermore, female students and those with liberal
attitudes toward women tended to hold violent husbands responsible for their
behavior, and to express support for punishing violent husbands. This article
concludes with a discussion of the study's limitations and the results'
implications for future research on the topic.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/dfAjkZ
By: Haj-Yahia MM1, Shen AC2.
- 1The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel m.hajyahia@mail.huji.ac.il.
- 2National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
- Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol. 2015 Dec 31. pii: 0306624X15621898.
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