Academic Journal

A vignette study analysing factors influencing attributions of responsibility to victims and perpetrators of intimate partner violence against women

Bibliographic Details
Title: A vignette study analysing factors influencing attributions of responsibility to victims and perpetrators of intimate partner violence against women
Authors: Carmen M. Leon, Eva Aizpurua
Source: Journal of Gender-Based Violence. 9:402-424
Publisher Information: Bristol University Press, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: 5. Gender equality, 05 social sciences, 0509 other social sciences, 16. Peace & justice, 10. No inequality, 0505 law
Description: Evidence shows that blaming attitudes towards victims of intimate partner violence against women (IPVAW) are widespread, creating a social climate that condones this form of violence. The aim of the current study is to analyse the potential impact of multiple factors surrounding the scenario and some personal and attitudinal characteristics of the respondents on the responsibility attributed to victims and perpetrators of IPVAW. To achieve this, a factorial survey design in which each respondent (N = 1,007; 51.1% women) received a unique vignette describing a hypothetical case of IPVAW was implemented in an online survey conducted in Spain. We found that most respondents (78.9%) indicated that the victim was not at all responsible for her own victimisation, whereas 73.7 per cent indicated that the perpetrator was very responsible for his own behaviour. Our results also show the prominent role that attitudes, as opposed to many characteristics of the abuse, play in evaluations of victim blame (that is, sexist beliefs and acceptability of IPVAW). Our findings reveal some persistence of victim-blaming attitudes despite years of public awareness and education efforts in Spain.
Document Type: Article
ISSN: 2398-6816
2398-6808
DOI: 10.1332/23986808y2024d000000017
Accession Number: edsair.doi...........15a4eb7f1512abc396d2436c3621ce40
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
ISSN:23986816
23986808
DOI:10.1332/23986808y2024d000000017