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“He Was Afraid I Wouldn’t Come Back”: Experiences of Transportation Coercion Among Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence in the United States

Abstract

Introduction

Transportation coercion, which we define as controlling a survivor’s access to transportation, is an understudied tactic that abusive partners utilize to establish, build, and maintain power and control in their relationship.


Purpose

The purpose of this study was to explore survivors’ experiences with transportation coercion in the United States using descriptive phenomenology.


Methods

Participants were recruited from three intimate partner violence (IPV) shelters in the Southern United States. The study participants were 20 female survivors of IPV who were receiving services from an IPV agency in urban (n = 7), suburban (n = 8), or rural (n = 5) areas. Over half (55%) of the participants were women of color (n = 11).


Results

The researchers identified three themes within the study data that included: (1) types of transportation coercion (both physical and psychological transportation coercion), (2) the impact of transportation coercion on survivors and their children, which highlighted the isolation and the negative impact their health and access to services, and (3) strategies to maintain autonomy to access basic needs, medical care, and safety.


Conclusion

Future research is needed to explore transportation coercion in other parts of the U.S. and internationally with diverse samples. Practitioners can empower survivors to maintain their autonomy by helping survivors recognize coercive control tactics that limit their mobility, providing transportation or advocating for transportation through the use of partnerships, and including policies that foster informal support networks for transportation.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 12/17/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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