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effects on researchers



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Thanks to you all for the help finding references on this topic, and sending
your own stories. I wanted to share the ones I got from
<br>you off-list and the ones I found on my own. Some are not exactly in
our field but are fascinating
<br>and helpful nonetheless. Basically, this work can be hazardous if we're
not careful. A kind of
<br>secondary PTSD can emerge even from looking at case records.&nbsp;
Some writers suggest procedures
<br>to protect research teams. I am amazed by the relative silence on this
topic by researchers who
<br>have conducted in-depth interviews. Perhaps they face fears of their
scientific objecivity being
<br>questioned if they report difficulty with the material.
<p><b>If I've missed anything, please send additional sources. I'm sure
there are more feminist articles that I haven't located. And thanks for
your help!</b>
<p>Alexander, J. G., de Chesnay, M., Marshall, E., Campbell, A. R., Johnson,
S., &amp; Wright, R. Research note: Parallel reactions in rape victims
and rape researchers. <u>Violence and Victims, 4, </u>57-61.
<br>Brackenridge, C. (1999). Managing myself: Investigator survival in
sensitive research. <u>International review for the Sociology of Sport,
34, </u>399-410.
<br>Buchanan, D., Khoshnood, K., Stopka, T., Shaw, S., Santelices, C.,
Singer, M. (Accepted for January 2002). Ethical dilemmas created by the
criminalization of status behaviors: Case examples from ethnographic field
research with injection drug users.<u> Health Education and Behavior</u>
(formerly Health Education Quarterly).
<br>Ellsberg, M., Heise, L., Pe&ntilde;a, R., Agurto, S., &amp; Winkvist,
A. (2001). Researching domestic violence against women: Methodological
and ethical considerations. <u>Studies in Family Planning, 32</u>, 1-16.
<p>Kinard, E. M. (1996). Conducting research on child maltreatment: Effects
on researchers. <u>Violence and Victims, 11,</u> 65-69.
<br>Urquiza, A. J., Wyatt, G. E., Goodlin-Jones, B. L. (1997). Clinical
interviewing with trauma victims: Managing interviewer risk. <u>Journal
of Interpersonal Violence, 12</u>, 759-772.
<br>&nbsp;
<br>&nbsp;</html>
</x-html>From ???@??? Fri Oct 19 12:04:49 2001
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Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2001 10:23:05 -0400
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From: lisa fontes <lfontes@javanet.com>
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To: Child Maltreatment Researchers <CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@cornell.edu>
Subject: Re: link between family violence and terrorism
References: <SIMEON.10110181527.A@Apercy.fujin.qub.ac.uk> <3BCF2A91.350B3360@bu.edu>
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Please also consider that directionality may work in the opposite way--
that war, terrorism, or brutal dictatorships (also known as state-sponsored
terrorism, such as disappearances, torture of dissidents) may contribute to
violence
in the home. I wrote a couple of little pieces about this based on work I did in
Chile on connections
between sexual child abuse and the dictatorship. They are quite preliminary and
buried in small
publications. I can send them to anyone interested. Write me back-channel if you
are interested.
Lisa Fontes

kathleen malley-morrison wrote:

> hi, andrew.  thanks for your response. i am interested in any connections.
> for example, i believe that when nations are at war, violence increases
> domestically, including in the home, as well.  i also believe there is
> evidence of higher than average  levels of domestic violence in military
> families and police officers' families.  and conversely, there is evidence
> that experiencing child abuse makes one more likely to engage in later
> delinquent activities.  so, i was wondering if anyone had made any connections
> between e.g., levels of violence experienced in the home and later likelihood
> of involvement in aggressive behaviors against society, including terrorist
> acts. and could someone be a terrorist and be  loving and peaceful at home?  i
> know the questions sound naive, but it seems to me there should be some
> connections and i was wondering if anyone in the field had written anything on
> the topic.   any suggestions you have would be appreciated.
> kathie malley-morrison
>
> Andrew Percy wrote:
>
> > Kathleen
> >
> > Are you proposing a possible link between terrorism and family
> > violence at the individual level (i.e. individuals involved in
> > terrorist activities are more likely to be also violent within
> > the home) or at the societal level (i.e. that is countries with
> > higher levels of conflict also experience higher level of other
> > violence)?
> >
> > Andrew Percy
> >
> > On Tue, 16 Oct 2001 18:32:32 -0400 kathleen malley-morrison
> > <kmalley@bu.edu> wrote:
> >
> > > I am a psychologist at Boston University studying family violence.  Does
> > > anyone know of any papers linking family violence (especially child
> > > abuse) with national and international terrorism?
> > > Kathleen Malley-Morrison
> > >
> >
> > ----------------------
> > Andrew Percy
> > Research Statistician
> > The Centre for Child Care Research
> > Queen's University Belfast
> > 5A Lennoxvale
> > Belfast
> > Northern Ireland
> > BT9 5BY
> > Tel: (028) 9027 4610
> > Fax: (028) 9068 7416