This article employs a critical psycho-discursive approach to social identity processes and subjectivity in an important and under-researched area; the psychological impact of domestic violence on children. We use a case study of interview interaction with two teenage brothers talking about their father's past violent behaviour to show that a highly idealised, dominant form of hegemonic masculinity - 'heroic protection discourse' (HPD) - was a major organizing principle framing both brothers' understandings of events. However, significant differences occurred in how each boy identified and made sense of self and others within this discourse. We discuss our findings in terms of (1) the destructive power of HPD to position sons as responsi...
Children who experience domestic violence are often described in academic and professional literatur...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Compelling evidence suggests that majority of young men who engaged in harmful sexual behaviour (HS...
This article employs a critical psycho-discursive approach to social identity processes and subjecti...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
Objective: This article engages critically with the claim, present in most psychological literature,...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
In a recent review of the literature on domestic violence and childhood (Callaghan, 2015) it has bec...
In the UK, domestic violence (DV) is one of the most common safeguarding concerns children and young...
Psychological research and popular discussion around domestic violence/intimate partner abuse have f...
Educational Psychologists frequently advocate for a systemic approach to supporting children and you...
The aim of this article is, by analysing childrens discourses, to investigate their actions or absen...
In this short research review I present a gender focused critique of the established literature on c...
What are some of the effects of inviting young men troubled by violence to take up non-violent ident...
Children who experience domestic violence are often described in academic and professional literatur...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Compelling evidence suggests that majority of young men who engaged in harmful sexual behaviour (HS...
This article employs a critical psycho-discursive approach to social identity processes and subjecti...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
Objective: This article engages critically with the claim, present in most psychological literature,...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
In a recent review of the literature on domestic violence and childhood (Callaghan, 2015) it has bec...
In the UK, domestic violence (DV) is one of the most common safeguarding concerns children and young...
Psychological research and popular discussion around domestic violence/intimate partner abuse have f...
Educational Psychologists frequently advocate for a systemic approach to supporting children and you...
The aim of this article is, by analysing childrens discourses, to investigate their actions or absen...
In this short research review I present a gender focused critique of the established literature on c...
What are some of the effects of inviting young men troubled by violence to take up non-violent ident...
Children who experience domestic violence are often described in academic and professional literatur...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Compelling evidence suggests that majority of young men who engaged in harmful sexual behaviour (HS...