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Improving Services to African American Survivors of IPV: From the Voices of Recipients of Culturally Specific Services
Tameka L. Gillum*
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: tgillum{at}schoolph.umass.edu.
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Abstract |
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Researchers have found that many services designed to assist survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV) take a mainstream, color-blind approach to their interventions. Several authors have indicated a need for culturally specific IPV interventions to adequately address the issue of IPV within the African American community. This exploratory study was designed to ascertain, from African American survivors, what their experiences were with mainstream IPV interventions and how their experience with a culturally specific domestic violence agency was different from those experiences. Overall, women described mostly problematic experiences with mainstream services and positive experiences with the culturally specific agency.
First published on November 17, 2008, doi:10.1177/1077801208328375
Violence Against Women 2009;15:57.
A more recent version of this article appeared on January 1, 2009

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