Publication | Closed Access
Beyond the Measurement Trap
179
Citations
28
References
1999
Year
Measurement TheoryMeasurementSocial SciencesPartner ViolenceViolence Against WomenCalibrationGender StudiesViolenceMeasurement TrapInstrumentationDomestic ViolenceHealth SciencesPrecision MeasurementGender-based ViolenceFeminist TheoryPerformance StudiesAlternative Conceptualization-and-measurement ApproachSociologyNarrow ConceptualizationDomestic Violence PreventionMeasurement System
Many areas of women's health, including battering, suffer from conceptual and methodological deficits. This article uses the “measurement trap” (Graham & Campbell, 1991), a set of conditions defined by lack of information resulting from a narrow conceptualization of the problem, poor existing data sources, inappropriate outcome indicators, and limited measurement techniques, as a framework for describing how current approaches to conceptualizing and measuring battering hamper research and program efforts in the field of domestic violence. We then describe an alternative conceptualization-and-measurement approach that is based on battered women's experiences. We argue that an experiential approach, which grounds measurement in women's lived experiences, improves our ability to conduct research that correctly identifies, monitors, and explains the epidemiology of this phenomenon and provides a solid basis for policy and program development.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1