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Journal of Family Issues
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Article

Love as a Battlefield: Attachment and Relationship Dynamics in Couples Identified for Male Partner Violence

Colleen J. Allison1, Kim Bartholomew1, Ofra Mayseless2, and Donald G. Dutton3

1 Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada
2 University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Israel
3 University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.


   Abstract
The authors explored the attachment dynamics of heterosexual couples identified for male partner violence. Based on semistructured interviews, participants were assessed for attachment orientations. Based on a thematic analysis of the interviews, two strategies for regulating distance within these relationships were identified: pursuit and distancing. Partners’ abusive acts often appeared to serve one of these attachment strategies. As a pursuit strategy, violence forced one partner to focus on the other, and as a distancing strategy, violence served to push a partner back when the perpetrator had been approached too closely and perceived no other means of escape or self-protection. To understand the context in which individuals acted abusively, the authors considered the interaction between the attachment orientations of both partners as they sought to regulate their emotional and physical proximity. Findings highlight the relational basis of intimate violence.

First published on September 26, 2007, doi:10.1177/0192513X07306980

Journal of Family Issues 2008;29:125.

A more recent version of this article appeared on January 1, 2008


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