
@article{ref1,
title="CAPINDEX: Abstract descriptors",
journal="Journal of family violence",
year="1992",
author="Connors, Kathleen A. and Heisner, Linda and Trickett, Penelope",
volume="7",
number="4",
pages="321-334",
abstract="Both research and public policy efforts to determine levels of spouse abuse have been compromised, with significant incidence either uncounted or undercounted, owing to numerous factors: social stigma, victim guilt, evasive public policy, and sparse and/or technically inadequate research attempts. The CAPINDEX (Crimes-Against-Persons Index) is an estimation technique that tackles this persistent problem by using rates of well-reported violent crimes to predict the incidence of poorly reported violent crimes like spouse abuse. The numerical bases of the CAPINDEX, murder and aggravated assault, are well-reported and not subject to social class skewing. The relational approach of the technique is consistent with structural, cultural consistency, and ecological theories of violence. The technique is not only efficacious in estimating spouse abuse, but applicable to estimating sexual assault rates.<p />",
language="en",
issn="0885-7482",
doi="10.1007/BF00994622",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00994622"
}