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Journal Article

Citation

Jackson D. Child Fam. Soc. Work 2003; 8(4): 321-329.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1046/j.1365-2206.2003.00298.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This qualitative study used feminist insights to explore experiential aspects of the phenomenon of child-to-mother violence from the perspectives of six women survivors. Participants took part in conversational style audiotaped interviews lasting between two and four hours. Feminist analysis revealed that fear and violence had become a feature of mothering for these women. Three themes were identified: It was only a matter of time: feeling intimidated and under threat; He just punched me: physical violence from child to mother; and Other men in the house: violence directed to the mothers by friends and associates of their children. Currently the literature overwhelmingly constructs family violence as elder abuse, spousal/partner violence, or child abuse, and generally fails to acknowledge, or address, violence from children to parents. However, findings from this study suggest that the discourse about family violence needs to be broadened to include child-to-mother violence. Implications of this study for practice and research are discussed.

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