LeCouteur-Oxlad2010

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LeCouteur-Oxlad2010
BibType ARTICLE
Key LeCouteur-Oxlad2010
Author(s) Amanda LeCouteur, Melissa Oxlad
Title Managing accountability for domestic violence: Identities, membership categories and morality in perpetrators’ talk
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, accountability, discursive psychology, domestic violence, gender, intimate partner abuse, membership categorization
Publisher
Year 2010
Language English
City
Month
Journal Feminism & Psychology
Volume 21
Number 1
Pages 5-28
URL
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/0959353510375406
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Psychological research and popular discussion around domestic violence/intimate partner abuse have focussed on broad features of descriptive accounts such as victim precipitation, excusing of aggressors, and minimizing or denying the violence. Few studies have examined the finer detail of how such matters are routinely invoked in talk, and how they are regularly built in ways that make their authors appear credible and warranted. This study uses a discursive psychological approach to examine the talk of men recruited from domestic violence counselling groups who participated in one-on-one interviews about their violent/abusive behaviour. The analytic focus is on instances of situated identity categorization in these men’s accounts that involved the consequential moral assessment of self and partner in ways that justify or warrant violence/abuse. Routinely, in these men’s talk about their abused partner, subtle and particular categorizations associated with being a woman were worked up sequentially to depict her as having breached the normative moral order. These warranting practices were evident in the talk of both men who denied, and who overtly acknowledged, the wrongness of their violent/abusive actions. The findings raise important issues for understanding how commonsense reasoning around the causes of domestic violence and its justifiability is sustained, as well as having practical implications for theory, prevention and treatment.

Notes