NCJ Number
187729
Journal
Violence and Victims Volume: 15 Issue: 4 Dated: Winter 2000 Pages: 459-471
Editor(s)
Roland D. Maiuro Ph.D.
Date Published
2000
Length
13 pages
Annotation
The current study attempts to extend what is known of unwanted pursuit behaviors and stalking by considering whether negative family-of-origin factors are associated with unwanted pursuit behavior perpetration after the termination of a romantic relationship.
Abstract
Parental divorce, history of parental relationship separation, perceptions of inter-parental conflict, and witnessing parental violence were retrospectively assessed in a sample of 213 college students (109 males and 103 females) from several regions in the United States, all of whom had suffered an unwanted breakup of an important romantic relationship. The study investigated whether these family-of-origin experiences were associated with perpetrating unwanted pursuit behaviors after the relationship breakup. The results indicate that male participants who had experienced either parental divorce or separation perpetrated more severe unwanted pursuit behavior than males who had not experienced parental divorce or separation or females from either divorced, separated, or intact families. For females, severe unwanted pursuit behavior perpetration was correlated with threatening and intense parental arguments. The findings suggest that a variety of types of negative parental relationship behavior may be risk factors for perpetrating severe unwanted pursuit behaviors. The gender specificity and implications of these findings are discussed, as well as study limitations. Tables, references