York University professor's research setting girls on path to healthy relationships

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TORONTO, November 4, 2004 -- The romantic entanglements of a 10-year-old might seem trite to some, but York University Psychology Professor Debra Pepler is all ears.

Pepler’s study, Preventing Violence in the Lives of Girls and Women: a Focus on Relationships, looks at girls’ early relationships, from childhood to adolescence, in order to determine how healthy behaviours are formed for later life, and how unhealthy patterns can be prevented. She will present her findings as part of the Violence, Gender and Health workshop, taking place at York University Friday, November 5. The workshop is being presented by the Canadian Institute of Health Research’s Institute of Gender and Health.

“Aggression – whether experienced as victim, or perpetrator – isn’t just a problem within the child,” says Pepler. “It’s a problem within relationships. We want to identify girls who are at risk at an early age, and set them on the right course towards healthy relationships, before these patterns of behaviour are established.”

The study examines girls from ages 10-18, and their interactions with family, friends, and romantic partners. Girls who experience victimization or are aggressive within family and peer relationships are at risk for a complex range of health and safety problems as they move into adulthood. Pepler has found that approximately one in ten students are victims of major physical aggression in their dating relationships.

“Unfortunately, you get into a situation where opposites do not attract,” says Pepler. “Girls who experience aggression at a very early age are much more likely to attract partners who mimic these characteristics.”

But the equation also works the other way. “Girls who are aggressive in dating relationships – and there are more than you would think – are also at a high risk for becoming victims themselves.”

The study has found that girls most likely to become entangled in abusive relationships are those already experiencing difficulties in dealings with family and friends. The prognosis for intervention – changing those troubled pathways – is best during transitional phases, such as a teenager’s move from elementary to high school.

Pepler emphasizes that the scope of the study is broad, and also looks at how boys interact with girls as an integral piece of the puzzle.

“For every girl we study, we also study a boy,” Pepler says. “Their development is equally important.”

The study is part of a collaborative “NET research” program, created to draw upon strengths in clinical-developmental and social psychology, social services, education, medicine, and social policy, in order to promote effective strategies for violence prevention to practitioners, policy makers, and the broader community.

The Violence, Gender and Health workshop will feature talks by researchers from universities including Simon Fraser, McMaster, Dalhousie and University of Victoria, as well as from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. Following these talks, researchers, post-doctoral fellows and students will gather for interactive research sessions. The workshop will take place from 9 a.m. – 4:45 p.m. in the Senate Chambers, room N940, Ross Building, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto. 

 

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 York University is the leading interdisciplinary teaching and research university in Canada. York offers a modern, academic experience at the undergraduate and graduate level in Toronto, Canada’s most international city.  The third largest university in the country, York is host to a dynamic academic community of 50,000 students and 7,000 faculty and staff, as well as 180,000 alumni worldwide. York’s 10 faculties and 21 research centres conduct ambitious, groundbreaking research that is interdisciplinary, cutting across traditional academic boundaries.  This distinctive and collaborative approach is preparing students for the future and bringing fresh insights and solutions to real-world challenges.

 

 

For further information, media should contact:

Melissa Hughes, Media Relations, 416 736 2100, ext. 22097 / mehughes@yorku.ca