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Friday, August 24, 2007

Domestic Violence Victims Are Not Always Women

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, domestic violence affects more than 32 million Americans (more than 10% of the U.S. population). Also, in the United Stated, 20% of all crime experienced by women are cases of intimate partner violence, compared to 3% of violent crime experienced by men.

Men Can Be Victims, Too

Very little is known about the actual number of men who are in a domestic relationship in which they are abused or treated violently by their male or female partners. Few of these incidents are ever reported to the police, so data is limited. However, approximately 23% of men who had lived with a man as a couple reported being raped, physically assaulted and/or stalked by another man, while 7.4% of men reported violence by a female spouse or cohabitant.

While data regarding abuse on males is limited, the following is available:

• 3.2 million men experience minor abuse each year (pushing, slapping, hitting)
• 800,000 men per year are raped or physically assaulted by their partner
• 370,000 men are stalked each year
• In 2002, men comprised 24% of domestic violence homicide victims

The causes of domestic violence are just as varied as the types. In some relationships, violence arises out of a need for power and control. Some domestic violence is learned behavior from previous generations. Abusers' efforts to dominate their partners have been attributed to low self-esteem and feelings of inadequacy, unresolved childhood conflicts, poverty, hostility, misogyny (hatred of women), personality disorders, substance abuse, etc. Some experts claim that all domestic abuse relates to men's need to devalue women and view them in negative ways.

Regardless of the causes, domestic violence remains a very serious problem in the United States today, and domestic violence can be very difficult to spot. Some of the worst abusers may appear perfectly calm and normal at work or in social situations. A common pattern of domestic abuse is that the perpetrator alternates between violent, abusive behavior and apologetic behavior with sincere promises to never do it again. The abuser may even be very pleasant most of the time. This is why so many people do not leave abusive relationships. They fall for the abusers lies about never doing it again and being able to change.

If you or a loved one has been involved in a divorce or is about to get married in New York City, Long Island—including Nassau or Suffolk Counties, please contact the experienced Divorce Attorney Law Offices at Silberstein, Awad & Miklos.

2 Comments:

At 6:38 AM, Jan said...

Dear Lynn,

Thanks for writing about domestic violence and in particular male victims. There are a number of under served groups of victims of domestic violence and male victims of female violence is one of the most highly under reported and ignored groups IMHO. Which is why I founded a national non profit 7 years ago that specializes in offering support, information and services to male victims of spousal and intimate partner violence.
Few people realize that male victims and other under served groups are not welcomed or offered services in many of the over 2000 domestic violence shelter progams in the country for battered women simply because they are men. Domestic violence doesn't discriminate and neither should service providers.
Thanks again for bringing light to this important topic.
Sincerely,
Jan Brown, Domestic Abuse Helpline for Men and Women
www.dahmw.org 888-743-5754 (national helpline)

 
At 10:25 AM, Lynn said...

Jan, thank you for reading and thanks for the kind words.

 

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