Recent interest in all aspects of domestic violence has stimulated rapid proliferation of research and literature. Although the knowledge base has grown, what we don't know still far exceeds what we do know. Starting from nothing, initial research tended to "sweep with a wide broom" in an effort to develop direction. The absence of an accepted methodology produced wide sample and design variations and inconsistent findings. The urgent press for information promoted a desire to disseminate "facts" that may have been less than factually derived from research that may have originally been seen as pilot in nature. This paper discusses the methodological issues that may have contributed to some of the inconsistencies in the marital violence literature and makes suggestions for the design and interpretation of research. © 1988 Plenum Publishing Corporation.
CITATION STYLE
Rosenbaum, A. (1988). Methodological issues in marital violence research. Journal of Family Violence, 3(2), 91–104. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00994027
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