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Teen dating violence meant to assert power

SEWANEE, Tenn., Feb. 15 (UPI) -- A teen dating partner can prove to be abusive rather than affectionate as a way to assert power in a relationship, a U.S. psychologist said.

Sherry L. Hamby -- a research associate professor at Sewanee, the University of the South in Tennessee, and a research associate with the University of New Hampshire Crimes against Children Research Center -- said teens who use violence and those who are vulnerable to being victimized have typically experienced previous victimization, harsh parenting and other adversities.

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Some of the most dangerous youth are those who expect their dates to meet all of their emotional and social needs, Hamby said.

Warning signs include jealousy -- and jealousy that is way out of proportion to how long a couple have been dating, or how serious their relationship, is a big warning sign. So are controlling and monitoring behaviors.

"If you have to send your boyfriend a picture from your phone to prove that you are really at your grandmother's house, that's a problem," Hamby said in a statement. "Youth who turn to violence to solve other problems are also at increased risk of perpetrating teen dating violence."

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Hamby, editor of the American Psychological Association's journal Psychology of Violence, said the journal was releasing a special issue about the interconnections among different types of violence.

Teens, parents or anyone else -- regardless of where they live in the United States -- can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE or loveisrespect at 1-866-331-9474, or text "loveis" to 77054.

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