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Importance of Gender and Attitudes About Violence in the Relationship Between Exposure to Interparental Violence and the Perpetration of Teen Dating Violence

NCJ Number
246908
Journal
Child Abuse and Neglect Volume: 37 Issue: 5 Dated: May 2013 Pages: 343-352
Author(s)
Jeff R. Temple
Date Published
May 2013
Length
10 pages
Annotation
Mounting evidence has demonstrated a link between exposure to family of origin violence and the perpetration of teen dating violence TDV.
Abstract
Mounting evidence has demonstrated a link between exposure to family of origin violence and the perpetration of teen dating violence TDV. However, only recently have mechanisms underlying this relationship been investigated and very few studies have differentiated between exposure to father-to-mother and mother-to-father violence. The current study used structural equation modeling on a large ethnically diverse school-based sample of male and female adolescents n = 917 to address these gaps in the literature. For adolescent girls, there was an association between exposure to interparental violence father-to-mother and mother-to-father and TDV perpetration physical violence and psychological abuse. For adolescent boys, only an association between mother-to-father violence was related to their TDV perpetration. Further, for both girls and boys, the relationship between mother-to-father violence and perpetration of TDV was fully mediated by attitudes accepting of violence. These results suggest that attending to gender and targeting adolescents' attitudes about violence may be viable approaches to preventing TDV.