"I Have to Fight to Get Out": African American Women Intimate Partner Violence Survivors' Construction of Agency

被引:15
|
作者
Waller, Bernadine Y. [1 ]
Bent-Goodley, Tricia B. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Irving Med Ctr, New York State Psychiat Inst, Psychiat Dept,Div Translat Epidemiol & Mental Hlt, New York, NY 10032 USA
[2] Howard Univ, Publ Hlth Program, Washington, DC 20059 USA
[3] Howard Univ, Sch Social Work, Washington, DC 20059 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
domestic violence and cultural contexts; homicide; battered women; disclosure of domestic violence; intervention; treatment; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; HELP-SEEKING; BLACK-WOMEN; STRATEGIES; VOICES; NEEDS; RACE;
D O I
10.1177/08862605221113008
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
African American women survivors of intimate partner violence are disproportionately murdered and help-seeking is a critical variable to examine as it relates to it. There is an urgent need to develop culturally salient interventions that center African American women's ways of knowing. An initial step to doing so is identifying how they employ their sense of individual agency during help-seeking. This paper reflects findings from a study designed to do just that. We conducted 30 in-depth, semi-structured interviews with women who self-identified as African American. Constructivist grounded theory methodology was employed. Constructed agency emerged from the data. This nascent theory explicates four phases of African American women survivors' help-seeking: resistance, persistence, rejection, and resignation. Constructed agency provides practitioners and researchers with a theoretical model to examine African American women's nuanced help-seeking efforts when seeking informal supports and interventions from formal providers.
引用
收藏
页码:4166 / 4188
页数:23
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