How Intimate Partner Violence and Intersectional Identities Converge to Influence Women’s Sexual Health across Environmental Contexts

Author:

Bagwell-Gray Meredith E1,Jen Sarah1,Schuetz Nikolaus1

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Welfare, University of Kansas, Lawrence

Abstract

Abstract In this qualitative study, authors examine women’s sexual risk and protective factors based on their experiences of intimate partner violence (IPV) and positioning within society relative to power. This analysis examines sexual risk and protective factors across intersectional identities—including gender, race, socioeconomic conditions, and age—among women survivors of IPV. The sample (N = 28) included women of diverse ages (range = 22–60 years) and races (57 percent White, 14 percent African American, 11 percent Hispanic, 7 percent Native American, 7 percent multiracial, and 4 percent South Asian). Findings demonstrated that IPV experiences differentially affect women’s sexual health according to intersectional identities and across various levels of environmental context by influencing the (in)stability of their lives and their experiences of (dis)empowerment. This analysis offers a nuanced understanding of how social workers can support women in planning for their own sexual health and safety and shows how an intersectional feminist framework enriches our understanding of the grand challenge to “build healthy relationships to end violence.”

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference20 articles.

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2. Health consequences of intimate partner violence;Campbell;Lancet,,2002

3. STDs in racial and ethnic minorities,2018

4. Does physical partner violence affect sexual health? A systematic review;Coker;Trauma, Violence, & Abuse,,2007

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