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12 J. Child Custody 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/wjcc12 and id is 1 raw text is: 


journal of Child Custody, 12:1-3, 2015                I)Routledge
Copyright () Taylor & Francis Group, LLC                  Taylor&FrancisGroup
ISSN: 1537-9418 print/1537-940X online
DOI: 10.1080/15379418.2015.1039918



  Introduction to the Special Issue on Attitudes
  and Current Research Concerning Intimate
    Partner Violence: Issues for Child Custody


                        JESSICA  E. LAMBERT
                Department ofPsychology and Child Development,
              California State University Stanislaus, Turlock, California


The  classification of domestic abuse in to distinct types has, unfortunately,
become  a divisive issue in the field of family violence and the practice of
child custody evaluations. Typologies for the abusive partner (Holtzworth-
Munroe  &  Meehan, 2004; Holtzworth-Munroe  &  Stuart, 1994; Jacobson &
Gottman,   1998) and  for  the dynamic  between   partners have  been
proposed  (Johnson,  1995; Johnson  & Leone,  2005). Perhaps the most
well-known   and controversial model of couple violence was  proposed
by Johnson  (1995, 2008) and distinguishes between situations where one
partner is truly abusive and situations where partners have poor conflict
resolution skills and both  resort to  physical violence on  occasion.
Johnson's model  of couple violence was proposed to represent a rappro-
chement  of different sides on the domestic violence debate-the feminist
tradition and the systemic conceptualizations of family violence (Johnson
&  Leone, 2005).
     As described in Meier (this issue) and Gulliver and Fanslow  (this
issue), Johnson (1995) argued that violent couples can be distinguished
largely by the degree to which one partner utilizes coercive control tactics
in the relationship. Under this assumption, there are some couples where
one  partner, typically the male in heterosexual relationships, is the per-
petrator of violence characterized by efforts to control and dominate his
partner. Such relationships were labeled intimate terrorism (Johnson &
Leone, 2005)  and were said to be consistent with dynamics reported by
most domestic violence victims in shelters. In contrast, physical aggression
in the absence of coercive control was labeled common  couple violence
and  later situational violence (Johnson & Leone). Situational violence


    Address correspondence to Jessica E. Lambert, Department of Psychology and Child
Development, California State University Stanislaus, 1 University Circle, Turlock, CA 95382.
E-mail: jlambert@csustan.edu

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