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Battered Women's Perceptions of Civil and Criminal Court Helpfulness: The Role of Court Outcome and Process

NCJ Number
233359
Journal
Violence Against Women Volume: 17 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2011 Pages: 71-88
Author(s)
Margret E. Bell; Sara Perez; Lisa A. Goodman; Mary Ann Dutton
Date Published
January 2011
Length
18 pages
Annotation
This study reports on women's responses to open-ended questions about what they found helpful and harmful about their experiences at court utilizing data from a study of low-income, predominantly African-American help-seeking battered women.
Abstract
Although most battered women seeking formal help have some contact with court, limited research exists on what they find helpful and harmful about these experiences. Using qualitative data from low-income, largely African-American battered women, this study finds that issues related to court outcomes, such as case disposition and enforcement, are important to evaluations of helpfulness. More frequently mentioned, however, are court processes, including treatment by staff, process length, and public disclosure. Results highlight the importance of research and practice attending to issues beyond court outcomes, as well as the potential impact supportive treatment at court may have for victims' recovery. (Published Abstract) Table and references