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Abused South Korean Women: A Comparison of Those Who Do and Those Who Do Not Resort to Lethal Violence
Bitna Kim*
and
Victoria B. Titterington
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kimshiner{at}hotmail.com.
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Abstract |
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This study compares two groups of women in South Korea: one group incarcerated for the deaths of their male partners and the other staying in a shelter for battered women. The analysis serves to answer two questions: First, are the findings regarding women who kill their intimate partners in Western societies generally applicable to their counterparts in South Korea? Second, how are abused South Korean women who resort to lethal violence against their abusers different from those who do not? Regarding both abused and nonabused women incarcerated for criminal homicide against their partners, results indicate that they have less experience of psychological and physical abuse by their partners and that they are less educated, underemployed, and more supportive of traditional patriarchal norms than are the women who utilize domestic violence shelters. This research explores implications for intervention strategies to encourage abused women to seek help from legal and extralegal sources.
First published on January 22, 2008, doi:10.1177/0306624X07312772
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 2009;53:93.
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2009

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