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Article
Violence Against Women: Outcome Complexity and Implications for Treatment
Journal of Interpersonal Violence (2004)
  • John N. Briere, University of Southern California
  • Carol E. Jordan, University of Kentucky
Abstract
This article reviews the major forms of violence against women, including sexual assault, intimate-relationship violence, and stalking and outlines the known psychological effects of such victimization. Also discussed are a number of variables that combine to determine the effects of such victimization, including type and characteristics of the assault; victim variables such as demographics, psychological reactionsat the time of the trauma, previous victimization history, current or previous psychological difficulties, and general coping style; and sociocultural factors such as poverty,social inequality, and inadequate social support. The implications of this complexity are explored in terms of psychological assessment and the frequent need for multitarget, multimodal treatment approaches
Keywords
  • violence against women,
  • rape,
  • assault,
  • battering,
  • assessment
Publication Date
November, 2004
Citation Information
John N. Briere and Carol E. Jordan. "Violence Against Women: Outcome Complexity and Implications for Treatment" Journal of Interpersonal Violence Vol. 19 Iss. 11 (2004)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/caroljordan/29/