It Could Happen To Anyone: Why Battered Women Stay

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SAGE, Apr 20, 2000 - Psychology - 272 pages
This revised and updated edition of It Could Happen to Anyone provides a comprehensive examination of why women stay in abusive relationships and why they leave, explaining why women should not be blamed for their victimization.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Learned Hopefulness and Learned Helplessness
15
The Power of the Patriarchy
39
Why Does it Happen to Her?
65
The Force That HoldsMoldsand Controls
93
The Impact of Stress and Learned Helplessness
117
Chapter 6 Catalysts for Change
139
Survivors Speak
161
Appendix A A Compilation of Statistics on Abuse of Intimates
169
Appendix B General Learning Information
177
Appendix C Specific Learning Experiments
183
References
189
Index
241
About the Authors
255
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Alyce LaViolette has worked with battered women since 1978, first as an advocate at Women Shelter in Long Beach and then in private practice. In 1979, she founded Alternatives to Violence in Long Beach, one of the first programs in the country for spouse abusers. She specializes in Anger Management, Domestic Violence Counseling for Survivors and Perpetrators, and Gender Issues. She also provides couples' counseling, and a broad base of individual issues. She also serves as an expert witness for criminal and family court.

Ola W. Barnett is a Distinguished Professor Emerita of Psychology at Pepperdine University, Malibu, California. She earned her undergraduate and doctoral degrees in Psychology at UCLA, specializing in Learning. Her initial research centered on batterers, and she later studied battered women and dating violence. She has coauthored two best-selling Sage books (with Alyce D. LaViolette) on why battered women stay with abusive partners. These books provide a scientific explanation, grounded in learning theory, for understanding the obstacles battered women face in trying to break free. She remains active in the field of family violence by reviewing articles for a large number of journals and performing as an external grant reviewer for a few organizations. She serves on the editorial board of the new journal, Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice. She also continues research on the impact of transitional housing on the lives of battered women.

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