Perceptions of Risk for Dating Violence Among Rural Adolescent Males: An Interpretive Analysis

Author:

Emezue Chuka Nestor1ORCID,Dougherty Debbie S.2,Enriquez Maithe3,Bullock Linda34,Bloom Tina L.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Women, Children and Family Nursing, College of Nursing, Rush University, Chicago, IL, USA

2. College of Arts and Science Communication, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA

3. Sinclair School of Nursing, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA

4. School of Nursing, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA

5. Women’s and Children’s Health, School of Nursing, Notre Dame of Maryland University, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

About one in eight U.S. high school students in Grades 9 to 12 report experiencing teen dating violence (TDV) in the form of physical, sexual, or psychological dating violence in the past year in person, on school grounds, and online. Compared with their urban counterparts, rural teens face nearly double the rate of physical dating abuse and an elevated risk of experiencing multiple forms of violence. Rural young males are exposed to regional masculinities and gender norms that may simultaneously promote female subordination (a prelude to dating violence) while impeding help-seeking intentions. We used an interpretive and dialectical approach grounded in Relational Dialectics Theory to explore how rural young males perceive and describe their own risk of experiencing and perpetrating dating violence and the factors contributing to their help-seeking intentions and behaviors. Data from three focus groups and individual interviews with 27 rural young males (ages 15–24) were collated. We identified two central dialectical themes described as (a) Social Tension Dialectics (subthemes include: Abusive vs. Unhealthy Relationships: A Dialectic of Language; #MeToo vs. #WeToo: A Dialectic of Victimhood; “It’s All Country Boys”: A Dialectic of Masculinity) and (b) Help-Seeking Dialectics demonstrating the dual roles Religion, School Guidance Counselors, Peer Mentors, and Social Cohesion play in promoting or preventing dating violence. Overall, we found dialectic tensions in rural youth risk perceptions about dating violence. These findings bear implications for advocates and practitioners working with rural youth in planning developmentally and culturally appropriate TDV prevention programs, offering policy and research-relevant insight.

Funder

Sigma Theta Tau International

Alpha Iota Chapter

Raymond White Dissertation Fellowship from the MU Graduate School

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science)

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