Difference between revisions of "Partner Abuse State of Knowledge Project"

From Wiki 4 Men
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:
 
|-
 
|-
 
!Reciprocal
 
!Reciprocal
!Female Perpetrated
 
 
!Male Perpetrated
 
!Male Perpetrated
 
!Feale Perpetrated
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Among large population samples
 
|Among large population samples
Line 20: Line 20:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Among school and college samples
 
|Among school and college samples
  +
|51.9
|
 
  +
|16.2
|
 
  +
|31.9
|
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Among respondents reporting IPV in legal or female-oriented clinical/treatment seeking samples not associated with the military
 
|Among respondents reporting IPV in legal or female-oriented clinical/treatment seeking samples not associated with the military

Revision as of 03:57, 30 April 2023

The Partner Abuse State of Knowledge project is the largest meta-analysis of domestic violence research ever undertaken. It is not focused on gender but rather analyses many variables. When it looks at gender it finds near gender parity in intimate partner violence (IPV) and also finds a high rate of reciprocal IPV, which it refers to as bi-directional.

PASK covers about 1700 peer-reviewed studies from around the world. Most studies, however, come from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

Meta-analyses like PASK offer compelling results and a way to minimise the biases of individual researchers so we can get to the truth of the matter. In the case of PASK we see the truth of domestic and intimate partner violence.


Classification Partner violence (percentage)
Reciprocal Male Perpetrated Feale Perpetrated
Among large population samples 57.9 13.8 28.3
Among school and college samples 51.9 16.2 31.9
Among respondents reporting IPV in legal or female-oriented clinical/treatment seeking samples not associated with the military
Within military and male treatment samples
Unweighted rates
Whites
Latinos
African-Americans

External Links

References