Domestic violence and domestic abuse is a world-wide epidemic. The prevalence of the occurrences of domestic violence is attributable to several variables: cultural differences between partners, alcohol and drug abuse, poverty, and mental issues of aggression, impulse, and character. Psychologists and sociologists have attempted to prove which of these components has the most important impact on whether or not a man will become abusive to his spouse. I say male not to dismiss the occurrences of female physical abuse of males, but because the studies analyzed in the following all consider male abuse of female. Each analyst makes a solid point about how their research indicates that the factor they are examining is the preeminent source of eventual violence. The only logical conclusion that can be drawn is that each of the four factors can contribute to a scenario where a partnership has the potential to escalate into physically violent altercations.
Cultural Conflict:
In the article "No Way Out: Divorce-Related Domestic Violence in Israel," Madeline Adelman (2000) states that in many situations, a woman who tries to leave a violent relationship can actually initiative further acts of violence from her partner. In her study, Adelman interviewed 49 battered women, as well as several people who work with battered women in order to formulate her hypotheses about domestic violence. She found that whereas in the U.S. one in 10 women report battery by a spouse, the situation in Israel is that one in seven are abused (Adelman 2000). The variables she utilized in the experiment were that she used interviews from different classes and social standings to try to get the greatest and most far-reaching perspective.
The Middle East is ripe with these kinds of situations because there are so many cultures living in such a relatively small area. Researchers Marshall and Furr (2010) examined the cultural conflict of women who were suffered from domestic violence in the country of Turkey. They were interested in exploring the tolerance of intimate partner violence (IPV) both from the battered women themselves and from the society in general. Abuse...
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