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Post-Separation Abuse of Women and Their Children: Boundary-Setting and Family Court Utilization Among Victimized Mothers

NCJ Number
245473
Journal
Journal of Family Violence Volume: 28 Issue: 6 Dated: August 2013 Pages: 547-560
Author(s)
April M. Zeoli; Echo A. Rivera; Cris M. Sullivan; Sheryl Kubiak
Date Published
August 2013
Length
14 pages
Annotation
This research examines women's responses to abuse committed by ex-husbands with whom they had undergone custody disputes.
Abstract
Continued abuse of themselves and their children is a concern for many mothers leaving intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetrating husbands. This research examines women's responses to abuse committed by ex-husbands with whom they had undergone custody disputes. In-depth, qualitative interviews were conducted with 19 mothers who had divorced IPV-perpetrating husbands between 1 and 3 years prior. Participants were located through publicly available family court divorce records and interviews were examined using analytic induction. Women's strategies to protect themselves and their children from abuse involved setting boundaries to govern their interactions with ex-husbands. Mothers often turned to family court for assistance in setting boundaries to keep children safe, but found that family court did not respond in ways they believed protected their children. Conversely, when women turned to the justice system for restraining orders or called the police for help against IPV, they generally found the justice system responsive. Abstract published by arrangement with Springer.