Understanding the Risk of Domestic Violence During and Post Natural Disasters: Literature Review

[1]  Walter Gillis Peacock,et al.  STRETCHING THE BONDS: THE FAMILIES OF ANDREW , 2012 .

[2]  A. Ager,et al.  A Systematic Review of Prevalence Studies of Gender-Based Violence in Complex Emergencies , 2011, Trauma, violence & abuse.

[3]  Catherine A. Taylor,et al.  Experience of Hurricane Katrina and Reported Intimate Partner Violence , 2011, Journal of interpersonal violence.

[4]  A. Stewart,et al.  A numbers game: lack of gendered data impedes prevention of disaster-related family violence. , 2011, Health promotion journal of Australia : official journal of Australian Association of Health Promotion Professionals.

[5]  Julie A. Schumacher,et al.  Intimate Partner Violence and Hurricane Katrina: Predictors and Associated Mental Health Outcomes , 2010, Violence and Victims.

[6]  C. Picardo,et al.  Physically and sexually violent experiences of reproductive-aged women displaced by Hurricane Katrina. , 2010, The Journal of the Louisiana State Medical Society : official organ of the Louisiana State Medical Society.

[7]  L. Lawry,et al.  Responding to Gender-Based Violence in Disasters , 2009, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.

[8]  M. Carney,et al.  Examining the Impact of Hurricane Katrina on Police Responses to Domestic Violence , 2009 .

[9]  Jeremiah A. Schumm,et al.  Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms, Relationship Adjustment, and Relationship Aggression in a Sample of Female Flood Victims , 2009, Journal of Family Violence.

[10]  L. Lawry,et al.  Increased Gender-based Violence Among Women Internally Displaced in Mississippi 2 Years Post–Hurricane Katrina , 2009, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.

[11]  S. Rosborough,et al.  Responding to Gender-based Violence in Disasters: Grappling With Research Methods to Clear the Way for Planning , 2009, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.

[12]  Rosalind Houghton ‘Everything Became a Struggle, Absolute Struggle’: Post-Flood Increases in Domestic Violence in New Zealand , 2009 .

[13]  P. Jenkins,et al.  Battered Women, Catastrophe, and the Context of Safety after Hurricane Katrina , 2008, NWSA Journal.

[14]  B. Devellis,et al.  Disaster Down East: Using Participatory Action Research to Explore Intimate Partner Violence in Eastern North Carolina , 2004, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.

[15]  E. Enarson Violence Against Women in Disasters , 1999 .

[16]  Alice Fothergill,et al.  An Exploratory Study of Woman Battering in the Grand Forks Flood Disaster: Implications for Community Responses and Policies , 1999, International Journal of Mass Emergencies & Disasters.

[17]  R. A. Schmidt,et al.  Risk of domestic violence after flood impact: Effects of social support, age, and history of domestic violence , 1999 .

[18]  Walter Gillis Peacock,et al.  Hurricane Andrew Ethnicity, Gender, and the Sociology of Disasters , 1997 .

[19]  G. Adams,et al.  Mount Saint Helens's ashfall: Evidence for a disaster stress reaction. , 1984 .