dc.description.abstract | One in three women is at risk of experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV) at some
point in her life. There are many consequences of IPV which can affect victims’ shortand
long-term wellbeing. However, victims often do not receive the support they need
to stop the abuse. This shortcoming is partly the result of victims’ decision to remain
silent about the abusive experiences, at least temporarily. In addition, it is associated
with victims’ choices of support and the responses they receive.
Victims’ help-seeking decisions are influenced by a range of different factors,
including victim and partner characteristics and factors relating to the nature and extent
of experienced abuse and control. Victims’ responses to IPV, including the decision to
remain silent as well as the decisions to disclose the abuse to informal and/or formal
sources of support, are commonly well-informed decisions made to the best of the
victim’s knowledge and personal risk assessment. While the decision to remain silent
may seem unreasonable from an outsider’s point of view, it often fulfils the purpose of
minimising experiences of risk and harm for both victims and their children. An
understanding of the complexity of factors associated with victims’ responses to IPV is
therefore crucial to address victims’ needs and enable them to stop the abuse
permanently.
This thesis is a comprehensive examination of victims’ different help-seeking
decisions and the diversity of factors associated with such decisions. It is theoretically
informed by feminist, coping, social learning, cognitive, and attachment theories and
uses a multi-method approach to reveal generalisable results combined with in-depth
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knowledge on predictors of victims’ help-seeking decisions. Study 1 examines the
help-seeking decisions of IPV victims (N=2,276) in a national household sample,
initially surveyed for the International Violence Against Women Survey (IVAWS)
2002/03. The data, provided by the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC), were
analysed using SPSS to identify predictors of victims’ different responses to an
incident of IPV. Findings reveal that victims’ help-seeking decisions are informed by a
range of different factors, including victim-, partner-, and violence-related factors.
The cross-sectional findings observed in Study 1 are further examined through victim
narratives utilised for the second study. Study 2 uses face-to-face in-depth interview
data collected from victims (N=29) living in Southeast Queensland. Victims
interviewed for Study 2 were approached through a number of different specialised
victim services they had recently been in contact with. Findings from Study 2 provide
greater insights into the complex nature of some of the help-seeking-related factors
identified in Study 1. Due to its focus on victims’ responses to IPV at different points
throughout their abusive relationship, Study 2 allows an identification of changes in
the dynamics of victims’ help-seeking decisions over time.
An integrated discussion of findings from Studies 1 and 2 reveals the salient role of
child exposure to IPV, victims’ realisation of abuse severity and outcomes of past
help-seeking experiences in victims’ help-seeking decisions. While findings identify
victims as active players with agency, several factors can complicate victims’ helpseeking
decisions and prolong their victimisation. Implications for theory, future
research, policy and practice are discussed. | |