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ALA, Library Research Round Table July 2009

Silent Crises: Understanding the Information Landscape in an Online Community of Individuals in Crisis. ALA, Library Research Round Table July 2009. For more information…. Lynn Westbrook, School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin; lynnwest@ischool.utexas.edu

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ALA, Library Research Round Table July 2009

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  1. Silent Crises:Understanding the Information Landscape in anOnline Community ofIndividuals in Crisis ALA, Library Research Round Table July 2009

  2. For more information… • Lynn Westbrook, School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin; lynnwest@ischool.utexas.edu • Maria E. Gonzalez, School of Library and Information Science, Wayne State University; eb9414@wayne.edu • See also other work on this area at: [http://www.ischool.utexas.edu/~lynnwest/cris/]

  3. Long-term Research Agenda • Structured, holistic examination of the information experiences of survivors of intimate partner violence • Using Everyday Life Information Seeking (ELIS) models, develop a theoretical framework for placing the individual in the context of complex, progressive situations • Applicable to parallel crisis situations experienced by victims of natural disasters, abrupt life changes

  4. Published to Date [Lynn Westbrook] • Information Myths and Intimate Partner Violence: Sources, Contexts, and Consequences. Journal of the American Society of Information Science and Technology. 60 (4): 826-836. 2009. • Crisis Information Concerns: Information Needs of Domestic Violence Survivors. Information Processing and Management. 45 (1): 98-114. 2009. • Understanding Crisis Information Needs in Context: The Case of Intimate Partner Violence Survivors. Library Quarterly. 78 (3): 237-261. 2008. [Winner of 2008 Jesse Shera Research Award] • E-Government Access to Social Service Information: State Web Resources for Domestic Violence Survivors. Dee Dee Davenport, Jennifer Richey, and Lynn Westbrook. Journal of the American Society of Information Science and Technology. 59 (6): 903-915. 2008. • E-Government Support for People in Crisis: An Evaluation of Police Department Web Site Support for Domestic Violence Survivors Using “Person-in-Situation” Information Need Analysis. Library and Information Science Research. 30: 22-38. 2008. • Digital Information Support for Domestic Violence Victims. Journal of the American Society of Information Science and Technology. 58 (3): 420-432. 2007. • Surviving Domestic Violence: Seeking Support in Cyber-Space. In Proceedings of the Information Resources Management Association International Conference, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, May 22, 2007. MehdiKhosrow-Pour, editor. Information Resources Management Association, Hershey, PA: 1294-1296. 2007.

  5. Present Research Problem • Within an online community, what are the information needs, barriers and resources of survivors of intimate partner violence? • Within an online community, how do those information needs, barriers, and resources correlate with the three large-scale stages of an IPV relationship (i.e., in, leaving, or left a relationship)?

  6. Objective for practical application • Inform the design and development of formal information structures and services, such as library Web pages and virtual reference • Shape evolution of information networks with meaningful categories drawn from IPV survivors’ expression of situations and needs not just practice or theory

  7. Definition of IPV • Intimate partner violence – pattern of abusive behaviors carried out in an intimate relationship to maintain power and control • Abuse cycle including “honeymoon period” • Abuse can be verbal, physical, financial, emotional, sexual, and/or social • Abuse almost always escalates

  8. Incidence and Prevalence • 5.3 million intimate partner victimizations per year in the United States1 • 2 million injuries per year2 • 1,252 deaths in 1995 or 33% of all women murdered3 • 1.5 - 2 % of women over 18 affected each year4 • 25 – 30% affected over lifetime5 • Higher rates among some U.S. minorities6 • Under-reported crime7

  9. Annual Costs in U.S. • $67 billion total as estimated in 19961 • $4.1 billion - Medical and mental health2 • $1. 8 billion - Lost earnings and productivity3 • Approx. $ 8 billion - Police, court and legal costs…4 • $13,800 per victimization5 • 33% of costs are borne by the victim6 • 67% of costs by insurers, public systems

  10. Background • More complex demands with fewer resources for services for survivors of IPV and their children • Available resources require effective targeting • Societal demands for greater self-reliance, self-efficacy of all citizens • Clinical and academic alternative solutions to coping with aftermath of violent or abusive relationships • Overlapping problems require tiered information and help-seeking

  11. Trends • 1993 – 2005 decrease in the prevalence of IPV along with decreases across all violent crimes1 • Increase in absolute numbers as population increases2 • Less assistance as resources curtailed3 • Expansion of coordinated efforts of criminal justice and social service agencies4 • Encouragement by funders for integrative research prevention programs5 • Therapeutic approaches utilizing narrative and story telling for attaining individual integration of abuse experience instead of total recovery from abuse6

  12. Role of libraries • Historical role as hub for community information and referral services • Professional ability to conduct tiered reference interviews with the focus on problem-solution rather than on information-distribution • Institutional responsibility for supporting and serving all members of population with a particular emphasis on those who have few options for information • Helps survivors = help children

  13. Data analyzed • Active, established, protected bulletin board • Permission of moderator; no interaction • Ten months of online discussions • 659 threads • Between 1 and 31 posts per thread, avg. 5.5 • 733, 272 words • Approximately 150 unique posters during period analyzed

  14. Methodology • Constant comparison content analysis • A priori codes derived from previous studies • Development of code book and rules • HyperResearch to mark text & produce reports • Identified all mentions of barriers, needs, preferences, and resources • Examined individual posts for evidence of Stage • One original coder with check-coder after 4 iterations of code book development

  15. Stages • Stage, In Relationship: may be thinking of leaving but has made no concrete, externally-visible step towards doing so • Stage, Leaving: may still be in contact but has taken concrete, externally-visible steps towards leaving including limiting contact and moving out • Stage, Left Relationship: the only regular contact is that which is required by law, imposed by childcare demands, or forced by the abuser

  16. Barriers • Internal factors (e.g., confusion, embarrassment, fear, PTSD) or external factors (e.g., bias, safety disregard, service capacity) prevent, limit, or inhibit a survivor from seeking or using a resource. • Does not include the abuser physically impeding the use.

  17. Needs • Poster recognizes s/he has an information need and asks others to fill it. • Information needs include asking for advice, requesting judgments, identifying abuse boundaries, confirming that an experience or analysis is accurate/valid, identifying techniques for dealing with abuse or abuser.

  18. Resources • Any positive mention of, full posting on, or recommendation of a system, professional person, book, web site, music, reading, movie, article, or self-contained document. • Includes a resource mentioned by any poster. • If the poster does not like or agree with the result but continues to use the item then it is still coded as a resource.

  19. Coding process • Two researchers identified parameters of the 6 codes including initial definitions • Through 4 rounds of code development the definitions, examples, exclusions, and referrals were tested, refined, and applied by both researchers to samples of 10-30 threads • Final code book rules were completed • Coding was completed by Westbrook and reviewed by Gonzalez; the 9 differences were resolved in discussion • Final reports were generated from the data’s coding

  20. Basic numbers • Stages (606 total codes on stages) • In relationship: 181 (30%) • Leaving relationship: 135 (22%) • Left relationship: 290 (48%) • Information elements (2232 total codes on IE) • Barriers: 487 (22%) • Needs: 434 (19%) • Resources: 1311 (59%) [many repetitions]

  21. Correlation numbers1 • Barriers • 22% from those in a relationship; 16% from those leaving; 62% from those who have left • Needs • 40% from those in a relationship; 24% from those leaving; 36% from those who have left • Resources • 21% from those in a relationship; 23% from those leaving; 56% from those who have left

  22. Information Elements Correlated to Stage

  23. What are the barriers for “in”? • Internal • Confusion (choice to leave, how to leave) • Fear (of abuser, of failure, etc.) • Police attitude (skepticism, judgment) • Attitude to abuse (only severe injury counts) • External • Family (lack of support, actual pressure) • Essentials (job, housing, etc.) • Criminal justice system in the short term (e.g., judge refuse PO) • System capacity (e.g., long wait for shelter)

  24. Examples of barriers, “in” • Internal • Confusion: “gosh inside my head I feel like its very much confused, spinning in cyrcle"s, decided on what to do” • Fear: “i am in fear constantly and am in desperate need to find what to do” • External • Family: “My father thinks I should just accept my ex the way he is and go back to him on his terms. He thinks that I caused the relationship problems.” • Practical: “I went back to my abuser. Cause I couldn't get a job or place to live.”

  25. What are barriers for “leaving”? • Internal • Fear of and confusion about criminal justice system • Emotional response to abuser’s “remorse” • Fear for children’s safety, emotional security, etc. • External • Criminal justice system equity in the long term • Going off the grid • Civil court system re keeping children • Balancing requirements, e.g., DV counseling and work

  26. Examples of barriers, “leaving” • Internal • Fear of system: “It was part of his plea to have no contact with me. I know he is violating it himself, but can he use it against me, like as an accessory to a crime” • Emotional response: “I made the mistake of being nice. Letting him hang out a couple nights so he could tuck the kids in.” • External • Going off grid: “do not use any banking or credit cards so he had to have found me that way. i have tried to contact the social security admin but they were no help.”

  27. What are the barriers for “left” • Internal • Reluctance to use support network, e.g., shame • PTSD • Emotional exhaustion • Embarrassed to to get follow-up help • External • Criminal justice system, follow-up support • Attitudes of support network members • Access to support • Counselors who do not understand IPV

  28. Examples of barriers for “left” • Internal • Reluctance to use support network: “I cant tell my parents everything... its almost embarassing in a way.” • PTSD: “I hadn't thought about this relationship for years but last week .. I have been having flashbacks.” • External • Criminal justice system: “my ex is still stalking me, my ro modifications were denied, and today is cino de mayo, which means it's his latest excuse to just bump into me out in public.” • Access to support: “What my husband did to me was so long ago. Is it too late for help?”

  29. What are the needs for “in” • In relationship • Understand and define abuse • Find a way to leave, emotionally and practically • Find a way to care for children, emotionally & practically • Leaving relationship • Build self-esteem • Understand “honeymoon” stage of abuse • Finding a counselor • Left relationship • Manage information re courts, life essentials, etc. • Identify abuse signals in new relationship

  30. Examples of needs • “When I state the facts, I start to think,WHY am I talking to this man, still????” • “I so much want out how do I in the world get the courage to” • “What about my son? I don't want him to grow up in a divorced home, but I KNOW that growing up in an abusive home would be worse. But, what will H do to son when I'm not around?” • “I think my inner relationship self esteem must be so low that on some level if P wants to see me, then I feel like I have some worth.”

  31. What are the resources? • Books • “why does he do that? inside the minds of angry and controlling men. by lundy buncroft. this'll really shed light on things!” • Internet • “learning everything i could about patterns/characteristics/ effects/types of abuse & how to recover. There are a lot of great websites” • People • “Today I met with our County Court's Victim's Advocate, for about an hour, and I was able to give my "Victim's Impact" statement” • Systems • “DV agencies also help with safety planning/support for women who are choosing to stay, it can help keep you safer & more prepared.”

  32. Implications for libraries • “Took me 5 months from the time i found this site to leave my abuser.” • Help people find the online communities that provide support, encouragement, and information • “I got out of there when I got individual counseling that helped me re-connect to my self worth.” • Help people find community resources of all types • “I used every search engine out there I could think of - Google, Live Search, Ask, Yahoo, etc.I tried different variations of phrasing” • Help people use the Internet effectively

  33. Implications for information studies • Refine understanding of IPV • Needs • Services • Resources • Develop greater understanding of other individual crises • Job loss • Pension loss • Home loss • Illness

  34. Questions remaining • What are the information needs best met within the library, e.g., books collected and services offered? • What are the information needs best met by developing relationships with community experts, e.g., teaching shelter staff to use the Internet effectively to further their support of survivors? • What policy, staff training, and marketing developments could help libraries support patrons who are facing personal crises?

  35. Suggestions? Input? Queries? • What should be examined next? • What are the strengths and weaknesses of your own community’s resources in the area of personal crisis management? • What research results would be of most use to you in developing your library’s support of people in crisis?

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