Journal of Interpersonal Violence
2016, Vol. 31(7) 1208–1229
© The Author(s) 2014
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DOI: 10.1177/0886260514564162
jiv.sagepub.com
Article
College Students’
Definitions of Intimate
Partner Violence: A
Comparative Study of
Three Chinese Societies
Yanpeng Jiao,
1
Ivan Y. Sun,
2
Ashley K. Farmer,
2
and Kai Lin
2
Abstract
Although a large number of studies have been conducted worldwide to
examine various aspects of intimate partner violence (IPV), comparative
study of people’s views on such violence in Chinese societies has been
scarce. Using survey data collected from more than 850 college students in
China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, this study specifically assessed the impact of
attitudes toward gender role and violence, personal and vicarious experience,
demographic characteristics, and locality on students’ definitions of IPV. The
Taiwanese students were most likely to define a broader range of abusive
behavior as IPV, followed by Hong Kong and Beijing students. Gender role
and violence attitudes appeared to be most important predictors of IPV
definitions. College students who supported the notion of male dominance
were more likely to have a narrower definition of IPV, whereas those who
viewed domestic violence as crime were more inclined to have a broader
definition of IPV. Implications for future research and policy were discussed.
1
Soochow University, Suzhou, China
2
University of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA
Corresponding Author:
Ivan Y. Sun, Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, University of Delaware, Newark,
DE 19716, USA.
Email: isun@udel.edu
564162JIV XX X 10.1177/0886260514564162Journal of Interpersonal ViolenceJiao et al.
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