An Analysis of Comparative Perspectives on Economic Empowerment among Employment-Seeking Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Service Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research on Economic Empowerment and Career Counseling
3. The Impact of Neoliberal Policies on IPV Service Provision
4. Theoretical Considerations
Major Objective of the Study
5. Methodology
6. Recruitment and Analysis
6.1. Recruitment and Data Collection
6.2. Data Analysis
6.3. Sample Description
7. Results
7.1. Structural Characteristics Shape Individual Experiences and Perspectives of Empowerment
7.1.1. Survivors
Empowerment means so many things under the umbrella. Engagement, it’s love, it’s care, it’s compassion, it’s so many things. It’s support, it’s ideas to listen to, it’s a shoulder to cry on, it’s so many things. It’s like an umbrella word.(Survivor participant 12).
For me, that’s what empowering means, to find who you are, and where you are going. Because literally, to be honest with you, and without any modesty. I know my future will be bright.(Survivor participant 02).
I feel it’s like a term I also associate with white woman empowering women of color… I want to distance myself from any kind of savior model, I really want to put a lot of distance with that.(Survivor participant 08).
They kind of tug at you. If you make a dollar more than what they’re expecting, then they can pull from you or say, oh, this is for you to handle now. But the more that you push for yourself is the more that you don’t have to look to the right or the left. It’s kind of like having another partner… Either you’re going to really have a career and be self-sufficient or you’re going to be reliant. And that in itself too, public assistance is kind of like a power control.(Survivor participant 11).
They racial profile, they sexual profile, it happens so many times to, a few times I got arrested just for walking on the street, and they claimed that I was sex working. And I was with a friend, but my friend was white.(Survivor participant 13).
It’s more about capitalism … Oh, like at risk employment, we’re an at risk employment state. So unless you have a recording of someone being like I’m firing you because you’re Black, like you have no standing which is like also, you know, violence against, or discrimination against trans women I think. is what I hear about a lot...(Survivor participant 08).
7.1.2. Service Providers
So, empowerment is a spectrum and it depends on what is the issue, where the client is going, what the client has experienced. But it is a spectrum.(Service provider participant 09).
I think, you know, just the whole piece of understanding your worth, your own self-worth.(Service provider participant 02).
I can tell you, I have never been able to see a human being as resilient as survivors of gender violence.(Service provider participant 09).
I think there is a risk of so many new clinicians, especially who have this ‘I can fix it’ attitude, like ‘I’m the expert’ and I’m imparting knowledge on you. Whereas, that’s not really what we’re after.(Service provider participant 10).
Other workforce development programs are focused more on what we call rapid placement where it’s like you do the training, you get the job and there’s really not any concern about the [low] salary you’re going to be paid in that job.(Service provider participant 07).
Like a lot of systems that are designed to keep people in poverty are filled with rules and systems that make no sense, that are, you know, constantly controlling people’s lives and who wants to do that.(Service provider participant 02).
I worked with a trans person who, had, was able to get a job. And I said, “How did you do that?” And she said, “Well, I dressed as my, you know, originally assigned gender for the interview and they didn’t realize so I got the job, you know. I would go in to my first day of work dressed as myself.(Service provider participant 04).
If you don’t have a valid work visa it’s really really hard to, you know, make the kind of wages that allow you to thrive, so you know, an immigration policy, you know, and like social policy, and racism and sexism, all those things impact the ability for you to make those [inaudible] so, um yes, I think structurally, at least in this country, you know, things have been set up to disempower, you know, marginalized groups, people of color, women…(Service provider participant 08).
7.2. Peer Support as an Integral Component to Empowerment
7.2.1. Survivors
You get mentors, you get a support system, you get empowerment, you get women that is just like you and we empower each other, so you get that empowerment. You gain friendships, you gain business partners, you gain everything that your partner took away from you. That intimate partner that went through a domestic violence situation with, everything that they took from you, you gain.(Survivor participant 12).
Being around women who are also empowered, I feel like that shifts my whole paradigm of thinking as well. Because women who are empowered, the director for [name of department] is an African American woman at [private firm]. And that changed my whole world, just seeing someone of my color so established.(Survivor participant 11).
The fact that I had members of the community asking me questions on how to deal with domestic violence or more about my story and how I overcame it, and some other individuals like myself that made it alive out of the situation that they was in. It was very empowering, that felt really good.(Survivor participant 12).
...creating a safe space, um like near your job or like whatever umm... I think like feeling like alone and shame and everything is just like such a big thing that like I just don’t know anything that’s like more helpful than community, you know?(Survivor participant 08).
I would say they took us on a field trip with [Name of private firm], so that was something that really struck me, because they had like a panel of five girls and they would all say what they do, how long they’ve been there, their situation. So, that was very motivating to me to hear that, and also coming from successful women.(Survivor participant 05).
7.2.2. Service Providers
Some individuals find their own sense of self through the work that they do as individuals initially, but some people find it by working in community and then reconnect to themselves as individuals. I’ve seen it kind of work both ways through the years. Either way, there’s a recognition of the strength of the individual and the strength of the community.(Service provider participant 02).
We have groups for immigrants, immigration leadership and empowerment group, we have a queer immigrant mentor’s program that we just recently started to match recently arrived immigrants with immigrants who are more established in [city name], pair them up with … like a buddy system to navigate all of the craziness that is [city name] and have someone there to support them.(Service provider participant 01).
Making us even more survivor centered and survivor driven and then also help market that elsewhere if it’s something they’re interested in. But we have a lot of [inaudible] people saying, you know, “I want to be able to think about what I’ve gone through and how it’s led me to here.(Service provider participant 04).
We really try to support people in individual work to be the ones who have their own plan, not influencing what they want but them telling us what they want to do, what goals they want to accomplish, setting out their own career plan and then we’re just there to support them but they’re the drivers of that plan and of what they want to accomplish in the future. So, the ability to determine their own path.(Service provider participant 01).
A lot of people in our groups end up really supporting each other, there is an understanding around needing support and like, there is a lot of like beautiful support that happens out of some of these struggles.(Service provider participant 05).
So it’s very survivor-led, it’s like very up to the individual what they are hoping to do, so it has been a real variety of things, for one woman who was a seamstress her whole life and had run successful businesses in other countries, we made the initial investment of getting her the machinery she needed and the fabric she needed to be able to begin her business here.(Service provider participant 08).
7.3. Employment Attainment as Economic Empowerment
7.3.1. Survivors
It’s like for me the way that [economic empowerment program] helped me, it empowered me because it gave me hope. It motivated me, so it changed my life. It turned it 360 all the way. I have hope. I can go places now. I know that I could do better. I don’t have to be stuck in PA all the time. I don’t have to be in an abusive relationship. So, it did empower me because it gave me hope.(Survivor participant 05).
Once you study, and you see that you’re understanding something, and you’re passing the tests, and then you’re finished the college and you get a good job, this all is like, gives you … adds to your confidence about yourself.(Survivor participant 14).
In my case, empowerment was knowledge…I think education and knowledge is the key to be empowered… Whether you’re straight, gay, trans.(Survivor participant 13).
Employment is empowering for itself because when a woman is able to do for themselves or do for their loved ones, it gives her a sense of self. It makes her know that she is important, she has identity, and that she has something to contribute to the world. And when you’re able to know within yourself that there’s a purpose, you have a reason to live with purpose.(Survivor participant 11).
7.3.2. Service Providers
So helping somebody like that, figure out a) what they want to do, find their own agency, do that [inaudible] and also then, you know, navigate all the things that come with that, you know, from negotiating salaries to kind of the interpersonal relationships on the jobs to, you know, all of the different kind of things that go into work, that we take for granted if we haven’t been exploited, has been a real focus for a lot of my work.(Service provider participant 08).
Obviously, intimate partner violence can also be financial violence and getting people support, as we were talking about, feel empowered to be financially stable independent of a partner is also really important, getting these pieces in place to have support.(Service provider participant 01).
We are focused on economic empowerment…And are really helping clients kind of craft plans that will allow them to build the necessary skills that will allow them to gain the necessary knowledge to begin or resume career that have been stymied by their experience of domestic violence or gender based violence.(Service provider participant 07).
We train workforce providers and employers to how they can create a more affirming environment for trans staff members once they hire trans staff members. And then on a more basic level, what does it mean to be trans, what’s the language around that, what are some best practices for hiring and for interviews and treating everyone with respect? Basic stuff that gets people used to language and learning about how to talk about LGBTQ issues.(Service provider participant 01).
The [organization] just started a policy and advocacy program and we’re building on that and getting community feedback and channeling community members into these different areas where they can really try and make some change so not having people just feel like, okay, I am a part of this system, but actually being able to feel like they’re empowered to make a difference and make change.(Service provider participant 01).
Another service provider also described her efforts this way:
Larger social structures really need to be challenged and policy needs to explicitly protect the, you know, the um right of all people. And I think when we talk about racism and we talk about, you know, immigration, and we talk about all of these things, there’s no way to separate them from empowerment in this country.(Service provider participant 08).
You know, there are different ways of finding one’s empowerment, because we are different so there should be different methods, different strategies, different tools. And I think helping our clients see that there’s no one way of healing themselves, that there are many different ways. There are many different ways that they have experienced the abuse so there has to be many different ways of healing from it.(Service provider participant 02).
8. Discussion
9. Implications for Policy and Practice
10. Limitations
11. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Demographic Information | Participants (%) |
---|---|
Age | |
20–29 | 5 (31) |
30–39 | 6 (38) |
40–49 | 4 (25) |
50–59 | 1 (6) |
Gender | |
Cisgender female | 13 (81) |
Trans female | 3 (19) |
Sexual Orientation | |
Straight | 12 (75) |
LGBTQ | 4 (25) |
Ethnicity/Cultural Background | |
White/European | 5 (31) |
Black/African American | 4 (25) |
Hispanic/Latin American | 2 (13) |
South Asian | 2 (13) |
East Asian | 1 (6) |
Arab | 1 (6) |
other | 1 (6) |
Country of Birth | |
USA | 5 (31) |
Other | 11 (69) |
Highest Completed Educational Level | |
High school/GED | 6 (38) |
Some college | 2 (13) |
Bachelor | 6 (38) |
Master | 2 (13) |
Number of Children | |
0 | 6 (38) |
1 | 5 (31) |
2 | 0 |
3 | 1 (6) |
4 | 0 |
5 | 1 (6) |
Household Income Range | |
Under $10,000 | 4 (25) |
$10,000–$19,999 | 4 (25) |
$20,000–$29,999 | 3 (19) |
$30,000–$39,999 | 1 (6) |
$40,000–$49,000 | 3 (19) |
Employment Status | |
Employed | 10 (63) |
Part-time | 6 (38) |
Full-time | 4 (25) |
Unemployed | 6 (38) |
Occupation | |
Beauty | 1 (6) |
Non-profit/education | 3 (19) |
Food service | 1 (6) |
Private (legal, financial firms) | 2 (13) |
Health | 2 (13) |
Demographic Information | Participants (%) |
---|---|
Age | |
20–29 | 2 (20%) |
30–39 | 5 (50%) |
40–49 | 2 (20%) |
50–59 | 1 (10%) |
Gender | |
Female (cisgender) | 10 (100%) |
Race | |
White | 3 (30%) |
Asian | 3 (30%) |
Black/African American | 3 (30%) |
Mixed | 1 (30%) |
Sexual Orientation | |
Heterosexual | 8 (80%) |
Queer/Lesbian | 2 (20%) |
Country of Birth | |
USA | 8 (80%) |
other | 2 (20%) |
Highest Completed Education | |
MSW | 7 (70%) |
MSW in progress | |
BA | 2 (20%) |
Years Working in IPV | |
0–3 | 1 (10%) |
4–7 | 4 (40%) |
7-10 | 2 (20%) |
10 and up | 3 (30%) |
Types of IPV Organization | |
Large, mainstream | 5 (50%) |
LGBTQ | 2 (20%) |
Trafficking, system impacted | 2 (20%) |
Financial/Economic Empowerment | 1 (10%) |
Current Position | |
Director | 5 (50%) |
Supervisor, manager or coordinator | 3 (30%) |
Case manager/advocate | 2 (20%) |
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Themes and Subthemes | Survivor Participants | Service Provider Participants |
---|---|---|
Structural characteristics shape individual experiences and perspectives of empowerment | ||
Fluid definition of empowerment | x | x |
Includes sense of safety, living violence free, confidence | x | |
Sense of personal agency that is not oppressive | x | x |
Goal-oriented | x | x |
Conceptual terms (e.g., self-determination, self-sufficiency) | x | |
Oppressive and problematic term | x | x |
A process managed by service providers | x | x |
Power imbalances | x | |
Programs that disempower | x | x |
Professional obligation to ensure survivors exercise agency | x | |
Employment discrimination based on identity | x | x |
Intersectional stigma and transphobia | x | x |
Pervasive sexism in the workplace | x | x |
Anti-Black racism and employment | x | x |
Social change efforts | x | |
Empowerment and peers support among employment-seeking survivors | ||
Connecting with other survivors | x | |
Sharing story of IPV | x | |
Building community | x | x |
Population-specific empowerment services | x | x |
Survivor-led services | x | |
Linking employment and economic empowerment | ||
The benefits of engaging in economic empowerment programs (EEPs) | x | x |
Employment is empowerment | x | |
Not everyone gets a job after engaging in EEPs | x | |
Agency as an important aspect in EEPs | x | x |
Relational process of empowerment in EEPs | x | x |
Peer support in EEPs | x | x |
Social change in EEPs | x | |
Importance of using different service strategies | x |
Type of Economic Empowerment | Definition | Examples |
---|---|---|
Individual empowerment | Individual, intrapersonal or psychological empowerment refers to the individual level of empowerment and personal processes of growth and change [32]. |
|
Relational empowerment | Relational or interpersonal empowerment emphasizes the importance of relationships and focuses on power dynamics, domination, liberation, and reciprocity. This type of empowerment values the importance of establishing relationships [47]. |
|
Community empowerment | Community empowerment involves a group of individuals who share a common experience or identity. Community empowerment generally occurs in a group setting and provides opportunities for personal growth and social change [43]. |
|
Structural empowerment | Structural empowerment seeks to address structural inequities experienced collectively by groups who have experienced oppression. This can also include systemic issues such as economic insecurity, lack of services, policies and practices that impact communities that experience oppression [48]. |
|
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Tarshis, S.; Scott-Marshall, H.; Alaggia, R. An Analysis of Comparative Perspectives on Economic Empowerment among Employment-Seeking Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Service Providers. Societies 2022, 12, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010016
Tarshis S, Scott-Marshall H, Alaggia R. An Analysis of Comparative Perspectives on Economic Empowerment among Employment-Seeking Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Service Providers. Societies. 2022; 12(1):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleTarshis, Sarah, Heather Scott-Marshall, and Ramona Alaggia. 2022. "An Analysis of Comparative Perspectives on Economic Empowerment among Employment-Seeking Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Service Providers" Societies 12, no. 1: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010016
APA StyleTarshis, S., Scott-Marshall, H., & Alaggia, R. (2022). An Analysis of Comparative Perspectives on Economic Empowerment among Employment-Seeking Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Service Providers. Societies, 12(1), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010016