PSY344 DomesticAbuse14 2 Essay

Submitted By michelleoso
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Forensic Psychology
Domestic Violence and
Abuse

Plan for Today
 Domestic

Abuse
 Battered Women Syndrome
 Learned Helplessness
 Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
 Rape Trauma Syndrome

Domestic Abuse (Jones,
1994a)
 Leading

cause of injury in American women sending more than 1 million for medical treatment every year
 Spousal violence contributes to one fourth of all suicide attempts by women
 37% of all obstetric patients are battered during pregnancy
 50% of homeless women and children are fleeing from male violence

Domestic Abuse
 FBI

reports that over 1400 women are killed by their partners each year (6% of homicides)  Lenore Walker (1992) – over one third of all women will be abused at some point in their lives
 16% of American families experience violence, 3-4% experience life threatening violence
 Each year 188,000 women are injured severely enough to require serious medical attention (Straus & Gelles, 1988)

Domestic Abusers
Typology
1.
2.
3.
-

Psychopathic abuser (violent/antisocial)
Overcontrolled exploder (family only)
Emotionally volatile
(dysphoric/borderline
Sociopathic, Anti-Social, Typical

Domestic Abusers
Typology
1)
2)
3)
4)

Severity
Frequency
Psychopathology
Criminal history

- Low, medium, and high risk batterers

Victimology
-

No consistent typology for victims
Despite myths to the contrary domestic abuse victims cover all ethnicities, all levels of society, and all personality types Syndrome
A

group of symptoms that occur together and characterize a disease
 Battered Woman Syndrome: a woman’s presumed reactions to a pattern of continual physical and psychological abuse inflicted on her by her mate
 BWS is not a diagnosable Mental
Disorder

Battered Women
Syndrome
 American

Psychiatric Association has recognized the syndrome in amicus briefs filed as evidence in homicide cases with selfdefense pleas.
 BWS is a justification to certain crimes like homicide that is used to support defenses of self-defense or insanity
 Has been used to support children who kill abusive parents, same sex partner homicides, rape victims who kill attackers, coercion to participate as co-defendant in a serious crime

Components of Battered Woman
Syndrome
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

Learned Helplessness
Lowered self-esteem
Impaired functioning
Loss of assumption of safety
Fear and terror
Anger/rage
Diminished alternatives
Cycle of abuse
Hypervigilance
High tolerance for cognitive inconsistency

Learned Helplessness
Seligman & Johnston (1973)
- dogs shocked in harness and placed in shuttlebox, 60% could not avoid shock
Hiroto & Seligman (1975)
- 3 groups exposed to loud noise
- Group 1 could find a button to stop noise
- Group 2 nothing would stop noise
- Group 3 asked to “please sit and listen”

Cognitive Qualifiers of
Learned Helplessness




1.
2.
3.

Inescapable aversive events inhibit learning Loss of sense of control – behavior has no effect on environment – this generalizes to multiple situations
Global vs. Specific view of negative situations External vs. Internal locus of control
Stable vs. Transitory view of life conditions

Learned Helplessness
 Loose

motivation to try to control events in environment or give up easily
 Cognitively, ability to learn from experience is impaired
 Emotional problems:
Rats (ulcers), cats (ate less), dogs,
(critically impaired task learning), monkeys (illness) humans (high blood pressure, depression)

Cycle of Abuse
Tension building phase
2.
Acute battering incident
3.
Contrition phase
- positive and negative reinforcement powerfully affect behavior
1.

- Not all battering relationships follow this cycle (60-70%)

Forensic Assessment of
BWS
 Self-reports,

medical records, interviews with family, friends, co-workers and others  Abusive Behavior Observation Checklist
(Dutton, 1992)

Psychological Abuse
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Coercion and threats
Intimidation
Emotional abuse (humiliation)
Isolation
Minimization, denial, and blaming
Use of