Affiliation:
1. Public Health—Seattle and King County
2. Refugee Women’s Alliance
3. University of Washington
4. Neighborhood House
Abstract
This article discusses the experiences of domestic violence among Ethiopian refugees and immigrants in the United States. A subset (n = 18) of the larger study sample (N = 254) participated in three focus groups with Amharic-speaking survivors of domestic violence who were currently in or had left abusive relationships. The research was conducted through a public health department, University, and community agency partnership. Findings show domestic violence as taking place within a context of immigration, acculturation, and rapid changes in family and social structure. Participants expressed a need for language and culture-specific domestic violence support and advocacy as well as education programs regarding U.S. laws and resources.
Subject
Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
78 articles.
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