Resumen
No research has examined the influence of physical and emotional sibling violence (SV) on other types of family violence in a sample of South Asian immigrants in the U.S. To address this gap, 674 South Asian immigrant participants who had at least one sibling in childhood were obtained from a survey distributed on multiple sub-Reddit pages. Participants responded on their experiences with SV (perpetration and victimization of physical and emotional), adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), intimate partner violence (IPV), and in-law abuse (IA). Demographics, correlations, and two regression models were run to examine potential associations of SV on IPV and IA when controlling for demographic variables and ACEs.\ \ Participants had a mean age of 28.38 years, 42.3% were female, 38.9% were 1st generation immigrants, and 79.1% identified as heterosexual. Correlations between all types of violence (SV, ACEs, IPV, IA) were significant at
p\<.001. No differences were found on differences in types of violence by gender. For IPV, the model was significant (
F=465.73,
p\<0.001,
R2=.82) with gender, SV, ACEs, and IA significantly associated one’s experiences of IPV. For IA, the model was significant (
F=459.69,
p\<0.001,
R2=.82) with generation status, SV, ACEs, and IA significantly associated one’s experiences of IA.\ With SV preceding IPV and IA in time, results demonstrate the need to include SV in understanding the violent experiences of South Asian immigrants. SV was correlated with all other types of violence and was associated with IPV and IA in this sample. Social workers working with SA immigrant populations should consider including SV in their assessments to ensure all potential forms of violence that one may experience are accounted for. Finally, psychoeducation of SV among South Asian immigrants is also warranted to inform children, adults, and families of the potential ramifications of SV.\
Palabras Clave (separar con comas)
family violence, South Asian immigrants, sibling violence, in-law abuse, domestic violence, adverse childhood events