Research on domestic violence against males. (paina search nappia)
A convenience sample of 13,601 students (71.5% women, 28.5% men) at 68 universities in 32 countries completed the CTS2. Findings reveal that almost a third of students assaulted their dating partners in a 12 month period. In terms of initiation, mutual aggression accounted for 68.6% of physical violence, while women initiated violence 21.4% of the time and men initiated violence 9.9% of the time.
A sample of 457 college men and 958 college women completed the CTS. Results revealed that significantly more men than women (35.4% vs 26.0%) reported being victimized by their partners.
Data from a National Comorbidity Survey was examined. In a sample of 3,519 men and women it was found that 18.4% were involved in a violent relationship. Most violence, both mild and severe, was mutual. However, women were more likely than men to initiate both mild and severe violence.
A sample of 414 college students (189 men, 225 women) responded to the CTS2. Results reveal that male and female subjects were equally likely to be perpetrators of minor violence in intimate dating relationships, but women were twice as likely as men to perpetrate severe violence (15.11% vs 7.41%).
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