Availability and Sensitivity of Services for Same-Sex Partner Abuse Survivors

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa St. Pierre ◽  
Charlene Y. Senn
2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 344-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim Bartholomew ◽  
Katherine V. Regan ◽  
Doug Oram ◽  
Monica A. White

We investigated correlates of partner abuse in male same-sex relationships in a randomly selected community sample (N = 186). We included factors associated with abuse in heterosexual relationships, as well as factors of relevance to gay relationships. We assessed perpetration and receipt of partner abuse to examine whether variables were associated independently with abuse perpetration and/or receipt. Correlates of same-sex partner abuse were largely parallel to established correlates of heterosexual abuse. Income, education, and attachment orientation were associated with bidirectional partner abuse, and family violence and substance use were uniquely associated with victimization. Further, there were factors unique to same-sex partner abuse; HIV status and public outness were associated with bidirectional partner abuse, and internalized homophobia was uniquely associated with abuse perpetration.


Author(s):  
Toni Calasanti

This chapter outlines an intersectional lens that considers the impacts of age, gender, and sexualities on gay and lesbian elders.  It defines social inequalities and specify intersectionality as a theory of how they relate, drawing on Crenshaw’s (1991) original concept, which indicates how overlapping categorical status creates unique effects. It then outline the intersections of age, gender, and sexuality in the study of gay and lesbian elders.  It focuses in particular on age relations as this inequality is often left out of scholarship on gay men and lesbians, even that which focuses on elders.  The last part of the chapter suggests a model for research on same-sex partner caregiving that would illuminate intersections of gender, sexuality, and age in this context.


2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 617-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim Bartholomew ◽  
Katherine V. Regan ◽  
Monica A. White ◽  
Doug Oram

Previous studies of abuse in male same-sex relationships have been limited by convenience samples and/or by incomplete assessments of partner abuse. We examined patterns of same-sex partner abuse in a random sample of 284 gay and bisexual men. Respondents reported on perpetration and receipt of physical, psychological, and sexual abuse over multiple time frames, as well as injuries resulting from abuse. Almost all respondents reported psychological abuse, more than one-third reported physical abuse, and 10% reported having engaged in unwanted sexual activity because of partner force or threats of force. More than half of recipients of partner violence reported sustaining injury. We found strong associations between different forms of abuse, and between severity of abuse receipt and perpetration.


Author(s):  
Jason Aaron Jones ◽  
Robert-Jay Green
Keyword(s):  
Same Sex ◽  

2012 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamara Cibrian-Llanderal ◽  
Viridiana Rosas-Aguilar ◽  
Rodrigo Triana-Del Rio ◽  
Cesar A. Perez ◽  
Jorge Manzo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Stephen Gilmore ◽  
Lisa Glennon

This chapter examines the law on parenthood and parental responsibility. The law has had to address a number of questions.Who is a child’s mother when a woman gives birth to a child conceived as a result of egg donation by another woman? Is the child to have two mothers? Can a female-to-male transsexual person become a child’s father? Is a mother’s same-sex partner to be recognised as her child’s parent too? If so, in what sense? As this last question suggests, the law’s response is also complicated by the fact that the notion of ‘being a parent’ has several different facets.


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