麻豆视频

A global view of men鈥檚 experiences with partner violence

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More than two decades ago, 麻豆视频 researcher began investigating a topic most researchers wouldn鈥檛 touch: men as victims of intimate partner violence (IPV). She and collaborator Emily Douglas were the first in the United States to earn federal funding for this line of research, publishing studies that challenged entrenched gender assumptions and provoked debate in the field.

The Routledge Handbook of Men鈥檚 Victimization in Intimate Relationships, co-edited by Denise Hines. Photo provided.

Their new book, , offers the most thorough international synthesis of this topic to date. Drawing on research from 31 contributors across five continents, it surveys how men experience abuse across places as varied as Uganda鈥檚 rural villages, the cities of China, and crisis shelters in Denmark.

鈥淲hat makes this book different is its global perspective,鈥 says Hines, the Elisabeth Shirley Enochs Endowed Professor of Social Work at George 麻豆视频. 鈥淢ost of the existing literature has been based in the U.S., U.K., and Canada. We wanted to broaden the lens.鈥

Hines co-edited the volume with Douglas, professor of social work and child advocacy at Montclair State University, and Louise Dixon, pro vice-chancellor of education at Glasgow Caledonian University in Scotland.听听

Geared toward both academics and frontline professionals鈥攊ncluding therapists, social workers, law enforcement, and legal advocates鈥攖he book highlights where current systems fall short and prescribes changes needed in prevention, policy, and services for male IPV victims.

Denise Hines, Elisabeth Shirley Enochs Endowed Professor of Social Work at 麻豆视频. Photo by: Creative Services/麻豆视频

Hines authored two central chapters, reviewing international studies on heterosexual men abused by female partners. She first focuses on English-speaking countries, where the research is more established. Her second chapter surveys a more fragmented but growing body of work from non-English-speaking regions across Europe, Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean.

鈥淚 think this work gave me a better global sense of what colleagues are working on,鈥 Hines says. 鈥淚t also showed where the gaps are鈥攆or example, there鈥檚 far less research coming out of Latin America than Africa.鈥

As the book鈥檚 preface notes, the field of family violence has historically excluded male victims from the narrative. Early researchers who challenged that framework鈥攕uch as Murray Straus, Suzanne Steinmetz, and Richard Gelles鈥攆aced intense backlash, including bomb threats, campaigns to have their tenure revoked, and defamation. Hines recalls similar reactions to her early work, including an online accusation that she was a male abuser using his academic standing to further abuse women and provide excuses to male abusers.

Despite that resistance, the field has evolved. Hines鈥 new handbook urges a more inclusive, evidence-based approach, accounting for men鈥檚 experiences across cultures, ages, sexual orientations, and social contexts.

鈥淧artner violence doesn鈥檛 fit one mold,鈥 Hines says. 鈥淥ur laws and our systems need to change to become more inclusive of the range of victims of partner violence.鈥