“…Walker and colleagues’ findings and those of other studies (e.g., Dutton & Nicholls, 2005; Gueta & Shilchove, 2022; Winstok, 2017) detail a variety of gendered stereotypes applied to men who are IPV victims by individuals in their sphere, including friends, family, and social service and court officials. Various findings suggest that violence against men is perceived as less serious by lay third-parties (Felson & Feld, 2009; Hines et al, 2020), by psychologists (Follingstad et al, 2004), and by police (Cormier & Woodworth, 2008); that male victims are conjectured to be responsible for their victimization (Parker et al, 2020); that male perpetrators are rated by third parties as nine times more criminal than female perpetrators (even when controlling for body size and perceived injury; Parker et al, 2020); and that male victims are much less likely than female victims to acknowledge their victimhood, despite meeting well-defined behavioral criteria for victimization (Arnocky & Villancourt, 2014). Regarding Arnocky and Villancourt’s study, paradoxically, men with higher levels of personal IPV victimization history (as measured by the CTS2) were less likely than men with lower victimization to perceive hypothetical IPV behaviors against themselves as abusive, a potential real-world reflection of men’s rejection of the “victim” label.…”