5 results on '"Gul, Pelin"'
Search Results
2. Attitudes Toward Wife Beating Among Female and Male Adolescents in Jordan.
- Author
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Schuster, Isabell, Gul, Pelin, Eisner, Manuel, and Ghuneim, Lana
- Subjects
- *
INTIMATE partner violence - Abstract
Previous research in the Middle East and North Africa has revealed justifying attitudes toward wife beating among adults, but little is known about adolescent attitudes and its predictors. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to examine theoretically relevant predictors of supportive attitudes toward wife beating among adolescents in Jordan. Due to limited evidence on the role of gender, potential differences between girls and boys were explored. A total of 856 students (455 female) from 14 secondary schools in Amman, the capital city of Jordan, participated in the cross-sectional study which was conducted during normal school hours. Religiosity, beliefs regarding control of female sexuality, moral neutralization of aggression, and parental harsh discipline were assessed to predict attitudes toward wife beating, controlling for sociodemographic variables. Acceptance rates of wife beating ranged between 6.1% and 50.5%. Hierarchical regression analysis showed that beliefs supporting control of female sexuality, moral neutralization of aggression, and paternal harsh discipline predicted supportive attitudes toward wife beating, but religiosity and maternal harsh discipline did not. Separate analyses for each gender yielded that maternal harsh discipline was a significant predictor of wife beating attitudes for girls, but not for boys, whereas paternal harsh discipline was a significant predictor for boys, but not for girls. Furthermore, beliefs regarding female sexuality and moral neutralization of aggression mediated the relationship between religiosity and wife beating attitudes. Policy measures and intervention efforts targeting particularly harsh discipline and sociocultural beliefs are sorely needed to address this issue in Jordanian society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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3. The role of moral neutralization of aggression and justification of violence against women in predicting physical teen dating violence perpetration and monitoring among adolescents in Switzerland
- Author
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Schuster, Isabell, Tomaszewska, Paulina, Gul, Pelin, Ribeaud, Denis, and Eisner, Manuel
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,4. Education ,Intimate Partner Violence ,justification of violence against women ,Violence ,16. Peace & justice ,physical teen dating violence ,Morals ,Aggression ,monitoring ,5. Gender equality ,Adolescent Behavior ,Humans ,Female ,Interpersonal Relations ,adolescents ,Longitudinal Studies ,moral neutralization of aggression ,Switzerland ,Crime Victims - Abstract
Funder: Jacobs Foundation; Id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003986, Funder: Jacobs Center, Funder: Swiss Federal Office of Public Health, Funder: Swiss State Secretariat for Migration, Funder: Department of Education of the Canton of Zurich, Funder: Bank Baer Foundation, Funder: Visana Foundation, Funder: Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung; Id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001711, Although dating violence poses a serious threat to adolescents' health and well-being around the globe, little evidence is available for Europe in general and Switzerland in particular. Also, evidence on the role of cognitive predictors related to a more general justification of aggressive behavior and gender-based violence is lacking. Therefore, this two-wave longitudinal study conducted with Swiss adolescents (N = 646) examined moral neutralization of aggression and justification of violence against women as predictors of physical dating violence perpetration and monitoring. As expected, higher moral neutralization of aggression predicted a higher likelihood of perpetrating physical dating violence and monitoring among both female and male adolescents. Justification of violence against women was positively associated with physical dating violence perpetration among males, but negatively among females. Also, a negative relationship was found with monitoring among females. The role of gender and implications of these findings for research, practice, and policy are discussed.
4. The role of moral neutralization of aggression and justification of violence against women in predicting physical teen dating violence perpetration and monitoring among adolescents in Switzerland
- Author
-
Schuster, Isabell, Tomaszewska, Paulina, Gul, Pelin, Ribeaud, Denis, and Eisner, Manuel
- Subjects
monitoring ,5. Gender equality ,4. Education ,justification of violence against women ,adolescents ,16. Peace & justice ,physical teen dating violence ,100 Philosophie und Psychologie::150 Psychologie::150 Psychologie ,moral neutralization of aggression ,Switzerland ,3. Good health - Abstract
Although dating violence poses a serious threat to adolescents��� health and well-being around the globe, little evidence is available for Europe in general and Switzerland in particular. Also, evidence on the role of cognitive predictors related to a more general justification of aggressive behavior and gender-based violence is lacking. Therefore, this two-wave longitudinal study conducted with Swiss adolescents (N = 646) examined moral neutralization of aggression and justification of violence against women as predictors of physical dating violence perpetration and monitoring. As expected, higher moral neutralization of aggression predicted a higher likelihood of perpetrating physical dating violence and monitoring among both female and male adolescents. Justification of violence against women was positively associated with physical dating violence perpetration among males, but negatively among females. Also, a negative relationship was found with monitoring among females. The role of gender and implications of these findings for research, practice, and policy are discussed.
5. Attitudes Toward Wife Beating Among Female and Male Adolescents in Jordan
- Author
-
Isabell Schuster, Manuel Eisner, Lana Ghuneim, Pelin Gul, Schuster, Isabell [0000-0002-2156-6308], Gul, Pelin [0000-0002-1856-2744], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, and Psychology, Health & Technology
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Human sexuality ,Suicide prevention ,Developmental psychology ,Religiosity ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Wife ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,adolescents ,Spouses ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,MENA region ,Jordan ,Aggression ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,social sciences ,humanities ,Clinical Psychology ,predictors ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Attitude ,Spouse Abuse ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,wife beating attitudes ,Female ,0509 other social sciences ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Previous research in the Middle East and North Africa has revealed justifying attitudes toward wife beating among adults, but little is known about adolescent attitudes and its predictors. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to examine theoretically relevant predictors of supportive attitudes toward wife beating among adolescents in Jordan. Due to limited evidence on the role of gender, potential differences between girls and boys were explored. A total of 856 students (455 female) from 14 secondary schools in Amman, the capital city of Jordan, participated in the cross-sectional study which was conducted during normal school hours. Religiosity, beliefs regarding control of female sexuality, moral neutralization of aggression, and parental harsh discipline were assessed to predict attitudes toward wife beating, controlling for sociodemographic variables. Acceptance rates of wife beating ranged between 6.1% and 50.5%. Hierarchical regression analysis showed that beliefs supporting control of female sexuality, moral neutralization of aggression, and paternal harsh discipline predicted supportive attitudes toward wife beating, but religiosity and maternal harsh discipline did not. Separate analyses for each gender yielded that maternal harsh discipline was a significant predictor of wife beating attitudes for girls, but not for boys, whereas paternal harsh discipline was a significant predictor for boys, but not for girls. Furthermore, beliefs regarding female sexuality and moral neutralization of aggression mediated the relationship between religiosity and wife beating attitudes. Policy measures and intervention efforts targeting particularly harsh discipline and sociocultural beliefs are sorely needed to address this issue in Jordanian society.
- Published
- 2021
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