Publication | Closed Access
Family Violence in Cross-Cultural Perspective.
513
Citations
41
References
1990
Year
EthnicityDating ViolenceCultural StudiesSocial SciencesPartner ViolenceGender StudiesDomestic ViolenceLateral ViolenceHealth SciencesCross-cultural StudiesGender-based ViolenceChild AbuseAggressionCultureSexual AbuseSociologyCross-cultural PerspectiveFamily PsychologyContributions Cross-cultural StudiesCultural Anthropology
Family violence is defined as a family member’s action likely to cause physical pain, with terms such as wife or husband beating encompassing a range from slaps to lethal assaults. The chapter reviews how cross‑cultural studies contribute to understanding family violence. Cross‑cultural studies are defined broadly as any method that compares two or more cultural groups, where a cultural group may be a nation, subdivision, ethnic group, or small‑scale society.
The purpose of this chapter is to review and discuss the contributions cross-cultural studies have made or might make to our understanding of family violence. To cover as much territory as possible I have defined cross-cultural studies broadly to include any information collection and analysis approach that involves either the implicit or explicit comparison of two or more cultural groups. Cultural group is defined broadly as well, to include nations, political subdivisions within nations, ethnic groups, small-scale (primitive, nonliterate) societies, peasant societies, and so on. Following the work of Gelles and Straus (1979) family violence is defined as the action of a family member that will very likely cause physical pain to another family member. The term beating, such as wife beating or husband beating, is used throughout the chapter to refer to any violent act ranging from a slap to a beating with a stick to murder with a handgun.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1