Graduation Year
2018
Document Type
Thesis
Degree
M.A.
Degree Name
Master of Arts (M.A.)
Degree Granting Department
Criminology
Major Professor
John K. Cochran, Ph.D.
Co-Major Professor
Ráchael A. Powers, Ph.D.
Committee Member
Christine S. Sellers, Ph.D.
Keywords
self-control, control-capacity, control-desire, intimate partner violence perpetration
Abstract
The effect of self-control on one’s criminal offending is a product of both an individual’s capacity to exercise self-control as well as their desire to exercise self-control. The present study utilized self-report data gathered at a large urban university in Florida (n=1,307) to test the independent and interactive effects of control-capacity and control-desire on intimate partner violence perpetration. The study suggests that while both capacity and desire for control have effects on one’s likelihood of reporting IPV, these effects are independent of each other.
Scholar Commons Citation
Brewer, Krista Taralynne, "Intimate Partner Violence and the Capacity and Desire for Self-Control" (2017). USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/etd/7002