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1. Understanding the difference between reactive and proactive aggression: A key to intervention Fiona McDonald & Michael Sheehan
Relationships Australia WA
2. Activity In small groups of five:
List the major reasons why people threaten to injure themselves or others
3. Major reasons why people threaten to injure themselves or others FEAR: feel they or their possessions are under threat
FRUSTRATION: expression of anger/rage caused by pent-up frustration
MANIPULATION: appearance of losing control in order to manipulate
INTIMIDATION: calm threats of harm to achieve an end
REVENGE: square the ledger
PAIN OR ALTERED STATES: brain damage/dysfunction, drug abuse
4. Understanding aggression
fear
Reactive aggression frustration revenge
Proactive aggression manipulation intimidation
5. Understanding aggression “Reactive” “affective” “expressive” “impulsive” or “hot-blooded” aggression
Impulsive & emotional response/reaction
Initiated by others: reaction to frustration, a perceived threat, provocation, physical or verbal aggression
Relatively uncontrolled & emotionally charged
6. Understanding aggressive behaviours Reactive aggression
What is done to the perpetrator (an aversive motivation)
Loss of control & emotional flooding – emotions rather than cognitions are dominant
7. Understanding aggression “Proactive” “instrumental” or “cold-blooded” aggression
Controlled, purposeful aggression
Lacking in emotion
Goal: the domination & control of others through intimidation
8. Understanding aggressive behaviours Proactive aggression
What can be obtained by the perpetrator from the victim (motivation of a reward)
Cognitions are dominant
9. Activity
11. Response to aggressive behaviours
12. The support/limit setting continuum (Bowie,1996)
13. Intimate Partner Violence Research suggests three qualitatively distinct types of intimate violence:
Male power & control (domestic violence)
Mutual conflict between partners (Johnson & Ferraro, 2000)
Violence used in response/retaliation to FDV
14. Intimate Partner Violence In Britain: 87% of FDV is male-perpetrated compared to 45% of male-perpetrated situational couple violence (Graham-Kevan & Archer, 2003a);
In USA: 97% of FDV was male-perpetrated, compared with 56% male-perpetrated situational couple violence (Johnson, 2006).
15. Domestic violence (intimate terrorism) FDV involves the systematic use of violent and nonviolent actions to achieve general control over one's partner:
Escalate over time;
Have a higher frequency of violent incidents;,
Cause serious injury;, and
Involve the one-sided use of violence by one perpetrator
16. Common couple violence Not characterized by a pervasive pattern of control
Intermittent response limited to a specific situation/result of differences or conflicts.
Mutual
Is not as likely to escalate over time
Does not occur as frequently
Is less likely to involve severe violence
(Johnson & Ferraro, 2000)
17. Experiences of victimisation Different experiences of victimisation reported by men & women within a DV context [Bagshaw & Chung (2000)]:
Males reported that they were not living in an ongoing state of fear from the perpetrator;
Males did not have prior experiences of violent relationships;
Males rarely experienced post-separation violence/ financial dependence on a partner,
Males did not report sexual assaults from their partner;
Few men reported that they experienced social abuse;
Women receive significantly more serious injuries than do men.
18. Summary Qualitatively distinct forms of violence
Understanding the difference can help us with:
Assessments
Interventions
Research