Murray Straus
Physical Violence in American Families
Murray Straus
Physical Violence in American Families
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The informative and controversial findings in this book are based on two path-breaking national surveys of American families
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The informative and controversial findings in this book are based on two path-breaking national surveys of American families
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 646
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Januar 1989
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 921g
- ISBN-13: 9781560008286
- ISBN-10: 1560008288
- Artikelnr.: 21247148
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 646
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Januar 1989
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 921g
- ISBN-13: 9781560008286
- ISBN-10: 1560008288
- Artikelnr.: 21247148
Murray Straus
I: Researching Family Violence; 1: The National Family Violence Surveys; 2:
Methodological Issues in the Study of Family Violence; 3: Measuring
Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales; 4: The
Conflict Tactics Scales and Its Critics: An Evaluation and New Data on
Validity and Reliability; 5: Injury and Frequency of Assault and the
"Representative Sample Fallacy" in Measuring Wife Beating and Child Abuse;
II: Incidence and Trends; 6: How Violent Are American Families? Estimates
from the National Family Violence Resurvey and Other Studies; 7: Societal
Change and Change in Family Violence from 1975 to 1985 As Revealed by Two
National Surveys; 8: Physical Punishment and Physical Abuse of American
Children: Incidence Rates by Age, Gender, and Occupational Class; III: The
Social Psychology of Family Violence; 9: Gender Differences in Reporting
Marital Violence and Its Medical and Psychological Consequences; 10: Some
Social Structure Determinants of Inconsistency between Attitudes and
Behavior: The Case of Family Violence; 11: Social Stress and Marital
Violence in a National Sample of American Families; 12: The "Drunken Bum"
Theory of Wife Beating; IV: Family Organization and Family Violence; 13:
The Marriage License as a Hitting License: A Comparison of Assaults in
Dating, Cohabiting, and Married Couples; 14: Family Patterns and Child
Abuse; 15: Maternal Employment and Violence toward Children; 16: Violence
and Pregnancy: Are Pregnant Women at Greater Risk of Abuse?; 17: Marital
Power, Conflict, and Violence in a Nationally Representative Sample of
American Couples; 18: Marital Violence in a Life Course Perspective; V:
Violence and the Structure of Society; 19: Race, Class, Network
Embeddedness, and Family Violence: A Search for Potent Support Systems; 20:
Violence in Hispanic Families in the United States: Incidence Rates and
Structural Interpretations; 21: Wife's Marital Dependency and Wife Abuse;
22: Patriarchy and Violence against Wives: The Impact of Structural and
Normative Factors; VI: The Aftermath of Family Violence: Coping and
Consequences of Violence; 23: Ordinary Violence, Child Abuse, and Wife
Beating: What Do They Have in Common?; 24: The Medical and Psychological
Costs of Family Violence; 25: Intrafamily Violence and Crime and Violence
Outside the Family; VII: Stopping Family Violence; 26: Response of Victims
and the Police to Assaults on Wives; 27: Escalation and Desistance from
Wife Assault in Marriage; 28: Family Patterns and Primary Prevention of
Family Violence
Methodological Issues in the Study of Family Violence; 3: Measuring
Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales; 4: The
Conflict Tactics Scales and Its Critics: An Evaluation and New Data on
Validity and Reliability; 5: Injury and Frequency of Assault and the
"Representative Sample Fallacy" in Measuring Wife Beating and Child Abuse;
II: Incidence and Trends; 6: How Violent Are American Families? Estimates
from the National Family Violence Resurvey and Other Studies; 7: Societal
Change and Change in Family Violence from 1975 to 1985 As Revealed by Two
National Surveys; 8: Physical Punishment and Physical Abuse of American
Children: Incidence Rates by Age, Gender, and Occupational Class; III: The
Social Psychology of Family Violence; 9: Gender Differences in Reporting
Marital Violence and Its Medical and Psychological Consequences; 10: Some
Social Structure Determinants of Inconsistency between Attitudes and
Behavior: The Case of Family Violence; 11: Social Stress and Marital
Violence in a National Sample of American Families; 12: The "Drunken Bum"
Theory of Wife Beating; IV: Family Organization and Family Violence; 13:
The Marriage License as a Hitting License: A Comparison of Assaults in
Dating, Cohabiting, and Married Couples; 14: Family Patterns and Child
Abuse; 15: Maternal Employment and Violence toward Children; 16: Violence
and Pregnancy: Are Pregnant Women at Greater Risk of Abuse?; 17: Marital
Power, Conflict, and Violence in a Nationally Representative Sample of
American Couples; 18: Marital Violence in a Life Course Perspective; V:
Violence and the Structure of Society; 19: Race, Class, Network
Embeddedness, and Family Violence: A Search for Potent Support Systems; 20:
Violence in Hispanic Families in the United States: Incidence Rates and
Structural Interpretations; 21: Wife's Marital Dependency and Wife Abuse;
22: Patriarchy and Violence against Wives: The Impact of Structural and
Normative Factors; VI: The Aftermath of Family Violence: Coping and
Consequences of Violence; 23: Ordinary Violence, Child Abuse, and Wife
Beating: What Do They Have in Common?; 24: The Medical and Psychological
Costs of Family Violence; 25: Intrafamily Violence and Crime and Violence
Outside the Family; VII: Stopping Family Violence; 26: Response of Victims
and the Police to Assaults on Wives; 27: Escalation and Desistance from
Wife Assault in Marriage; 28: Family Patterns and Primary Prevention of
Family Violence
I: Researching Family Violence; 1: The National Family Violence Surveys; 2:
Methodological Issues in the Study of Family Violence; 3: Measuring
Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales; 4: The
Conflict Tactics Scales and Its Critics: An Evaluation and New Data on
Validity and Reliability; 5: Injury and Frequency of Assault and the
"Representative Sample Fallacy" in Measuring Wife Beating and Child Abuse;
II: Incidence and Trends; 6: How Violent Are American Families? Estimates
from the National Family Violence Resurvey and Other Studies; 7: Societal
Change and Change in Family Violence from 1975 to 1985 As Revealed by Two
National Surveys; 8: Physical Punishment and Physical Abuse of American
Children: Incidence Rates by Age, Gender, and Occupational Class; III: The
Social Psychology of Family Violence; 9: Gender Differences in Reporting
Marital Violence and Its Medical and Psychological Consequences; 10: Some
Social Structure Determinants of Inconsistency between Attitudes and
Behavior: The Case of Family Violence; 11: Social Stress and Marital
Violence in a National Sample of American Families; 12: The "Drunken Bum"
Theory of Wife Beating; IV: Family Organization and Family Violence; 13:
The Marriage License as a Hitting License: A Comparison of Assaults in
Dating, Cohabiting, and Married Couples; 14: Family Patterns and Child
Abuse; 15: Maternal Employment and Violence toward Children; 16: Violence
and Pregnancy: Are Pregnant Women at Greater Risk of Abuse?; 17: Marital
Power, Conflict, and Violence in a Nationally Representative Sample of
American Couples; 18: Marital Violence in a Life Course Perspective; V:
Violence and the Structure of Society; 19: Race, Class, Network
Embeddedness, and Family Violence: A Search for Potent Support Systems; 20:
Violence in Hispanic Families in the United States: Incidence Rates and
Structural Interpretations; 21: Wife's Marital Dependency and Wife Abuse;
22: Patriarchy and Violence against Wives: The Impact of Structural and
Normative Factors; VI: The Aftermath of Family Violence: Coping and
Consequences of Violence; 23: Ordinary Violence, Child Abuse, and Wife
Beating: What Do They Have in Common?; 24: The Medical and Psychological
Costs of Family Violence; 25: Intrafamily Violence and Crime and Violence
Outside the Family; VII: Stopping Family Violence; 26: Response of Victims
and the Police to Assaults on Wives; 27: Escalation and Desistance from
Wife Assault in Marriage; 28: Family Patterns and Primary Prevention of
Family Violence
Methodological Issues in the Study of Family Violence; 3: Measuring
Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales; 4: The
Conflict Tactics Scales and Its Critics: An Evaluation and New Data on
Validity and Reliability; 5: Injury and Frequency of Assault and the
"Representative Sample Fallacy" in Measuring Wife Beating and Child Abuse;
II: Incidence and Trends; 6: How Violent Are American Families? Estimates
from the National Family Violence Resurvey and Other Studies; 7: Societal
Change and Change in Family Violence from 1975 to 1985 As Revealed by Two
National Surveys; 8: Physical Punishment and Physical Abuse of American
Children: Incidence Rates by Age, Gender, and Occupational Class; III: The
Social Psychology of Family Violence; 9: Gender Differences in Reporting
Marital Violence and Its Medical and Psychological Consequences; 10: Some
Social Structure Determinants of Inconsistency between Attitudes and
Behavior: The Case of Family Violence; 11: Social Stress and Marital
Violence in a National Sample of American Families; 12: The "Drunken Bum"
Theory of Wife Beating; IV: Family Organization and Family Violence; 13:
The Marriage License as a Hitting License: A Comparison of Assaults in
Dating, Cohabiting, and Married Couples; 14: Family Patterns and Child
Abuse; 15: Maternal Employment and Violence toward Children; 16: Violence
and Pregnancy: Are Pregnant Women at Greater Risk of Abuse?; 17: Marital
Power, Conflict, and Violence in a Nationally Representative Sample of
American Couples; 18: Marital Violence in a Life Course Perspective; V:
Violence and the Structure of Society; 19: Race, Class, Network
Embeddedness, and Family Violence: A Search for Potent Support Systems; 20:
Violence in Hispanic Families in the United States: Incidence Rates and
Structural Interpretations; 21: Wife's Marital Dependency and Wife Abuse;
22: Patriarchy and Violence against Wives: The Impact of Structural and
Normative Factors; VI: The Aftermath of Family Violence: Coping and
Consequences of Violence; 23: Ordinary Violence, Child Abuse, and Wife
Beating: What Do They Have in Common?; 24: The Medical and Psychological
Costs of Family Violence; 25: Intrafamily Violence and Crime and Violence
Outside the Family; VII: Stopping Family Violence; 26: Response of Victims
and the Police to Assaults on Wives; 27: Escalation and Desistance from
Wife Assault in Marriage; 28: Family Patterns and Primary Prevention of
Family Violence