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Female Immigrant Victims of Domestic Violence: A Comparison between Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel and Israeli-Born Women

NCJ Number
240495
Journal
Journal of Family Violence Volume: 27 Issue: 6 Dated: August 2012 Pages: 561-572
Author(s)
Eugene Tartakovsky; Sabina Mezhibovsky
Date Published
August 2012
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This study aims to understand socio-demographic characteristics, patterns of physical and psychological violence, and the system of social support among female immigrants.
Abstract
This study aimed to understand patterns of physical and psychological violence and the system of social support among female immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel who are suffering from domestic violence. Immigrant women receiving help in Centers for the Treatment and Prevention of Domestic Violence and in shelters for battered women (n=74) were compared with Israeli-born women receiving help in the same Centers and shelters (n=107). Immigrant and Israeli-born women reported similar levels of physical and psychological violence, and the immigrants' utilization of formal and informal systems of social support was similar to that among Israeli-born women. However, immigrant women were threatened more frequently with expulsion from Israel, and their partners were alcoholically intoxicated more often than the partners of Israeli-born women. Non-Jewish women were more frequently threatened with expulsion from Israel, and they reported a lower level of social support received from parents and friends. Abstract published by arrangement with Springer.