Description
Book SynopsisThis book offers a critical examination of the ethical and moral challenges in conducting research about domestic abuse or sexual violence from the perspectives of studentpractitioners and novice researchers within various professional disciplines, offering rich insights based on the experiences of each author.
Including the research expertise of academics in this field and importantly, the experiences of student-practitioners in conducting their research, the book explores practice-informed research and research-informed practice, in relation to the examination of a range of issues and themes related to DA and SV. All contributors consider the challenges and reflect on the salient issues related to their ethical research, and with some of the research conducted during the global pandemic of COVID-19, they also reflect on these additional challenges and how they sought to address them. The reader is invited to consider the different national and international, gendered, cultur
Table of Contents
Introduction: Positioning the student perspective on doing research.
Claire McLoone-Richards
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- Researching Domestic Abuse and Sexual Violence: Ethical and Methodological Considerations. Holly Taylor-Dunn
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- Intersectional research narratives and reflections. Neelam Rose
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- Is it just a normal feature of their romantic relationships? Levels of acceptance towards adolescent digital dating abuse. Emma Jane Noble
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- The dynamics and perspectives of stalking and harassment behaviours. Malin Lunde Jensen
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- Why didn’t she fight back? An exploration of victim blaming through tonic immobility reactions to sexual violence. Sophie Heritage
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- Understanding the perspectives of professionals working with female victims of male perpetrated sexual violence and the concern of secondary victimisation. Jade Jeffrey
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- Social Workers’ response to women "Fleeing and Leaving" domestic abuse within the context of child protection. Ayla Nasuh
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- The relationship between trauma recovery and statutory responses to safeguarding families affected by domestic abuse. Katharine Jones
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- A qualitative study exploring the experience of sleep deprivation as a means of coercive control in intimate relationships. Suzie Richards
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- The British Army and Domestic Abuse. Dave Aitken
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- Crime between the Lines: Policing Coercive Control. Sarah Pugh
Concluding Remarks: An editorial call to the novice researcher. Claire McLoone-Richards