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Intersections, Immigration, and Partner Violence: A View From a New Gateway Baltimore, Maryland

NCJ Number
236400
Journal
Women & Criminal Justice Volume: 21 Issue: 3 Dated: July-September 2011 Pages: 250-266
Author(s)
Natalie J. Sokoloff; Susan C. Pearce
Date Published
July 2011
Length
17 pages
Annotation
This article examines domestic violence and immigrant women.
Abstract
This article reports on the results of exploratory surveys with immigrant women regarding their observations of intimate partner violence and criminal justice practices in their communities in the emerging immigrant gateway of Baltimore, Maryland. Using an intersectional/interlocking theoretical framework, it asks how nativity interacts with other social locations in the experiences of partner violence through surveys of women representing five language groups. The study found high levels of awareness of the problem of partner violence in immigrant communities and strong awareness of many U.S. criminal justice approaches to the problem. Although the women preferred informal sources of support in a situation of abuse, they strongly supported government intervention. The study found found low levels of awareness of the Violence Against Women Act as well as little support for the higher levels of prosecution for batterers, even though arrest was sometimes approved. The article calls for sensitive policies and practices that take into account the particular vulnerabilities of the foreign-born, especially in localities where national diversity is relatively novel. (Published Abstract)