The National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV), [United States], 2013-2020 (ICPSR 36499)

Version Date: Feb 13, 2023 View help for published

Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s)
Bruce Taylor, NORC at the University of Chicago; Elizabeth Mumford, NORC at the University of Chicago; Weiwei Liu, NORC at the University of Chicago; Peggy Giordano, Bowling Green State University

https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36499.v4

Version V4 ()

  • V4 [2023-02-13]
  • V3 [2021-10-18] unpublished
  • V2 [2019-10-29] unpublished
  • V1 [2017-06-30] unpublished
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The National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV) examines the changing nature of adolescent dating relationships, particularly those marked by adolescent relationship abuse (ARA). More specifically, this study was designed to produce nationally representative estimates of the prevalence of multiple forms of ARA among youth (ages 10-18), to document the characteristics of abusive relationships during adolescence, to assess ARA risk factors, and to situate these estimates within the environment of adolescents' key social relationships and communications.

STRiV includes individual data from a nationally representative sample of households with at least one resident youth. Baseline and follow-up surveys were completed using a secure web survey with toll-free telephone and online help available.

Taylor, Bruce, Mumford, Elizabeth, Liu, Weiwei, and Giordano, Peggy. The National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV), [United States], 2013-2020. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2023-02-13. https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36499.v4

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United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice (2011-WG-BX-0020, 2014-VA-CX-0065, 2016-VF-GX-0007, 2017-MU-CX-0031)

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Access to these data is restricted. Users interested in obtaining these data must complete a Restricted Data Use Agreement, specify the reason for the request, and obtain IRB approval or notice of exemption for their research.

Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
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2013 -- 2020
2013-10 -- 2014-01 (Wave 1), 2014-10 -- 2015-05 (Wave 2), 2015-10 -- 2016-05 (Wave 3), 2016-10 -- 2017-07 (Wave 4), 2018-10 -- 2019-09 (Wave 5), 2019-12 -- 2020-11 (Wave 6)
  1. For further information, please see the STRiV study page on the NORC website.
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The National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV) examined the changing nature of adolescent dating relationships, particularly those marked by adolescent relationship abuse (ARA). More specifically, this study was designed to produce nationally representative estimates of the prevalence of multiple forms of ARA among youth (ages 10-18), to document the characteristics of abusive relationships during adolescence, to assess ARA risk factors, and to situate these estimates within the environment of adolescents' key social relationships and communications.

The goals of this study included the following:

  1. Provide a national portrait of the prevalence of varying categories of ARA victimization and perpetration, including levels of physical and emotional injury, and describe how exposure to these forms of ARA varies by gender, socio-economic status and other key demographic characteristics.
  2. Identify specific conditional attitudes, dating relationship characteristics, and peer network dynamics associated with ARA risk, and to determine whether these pathways are uniquely gendered.
  3. Investigate specific consequences of ARA to dating relationships, and whether the adolescent discloses information about ARA incidents to peers and others and their responses.

Researchers recruited a nationally representative sample of 5,105 households with at least one resident youth between the ages of 10 and 18 to complete an adult parent or caregiver baseline survey and a separate child survey online from October 2013 to January 2014. Of the 5,105 recruited households, 556 of the sample actively refused to participate in the study and 1,816 did not respond to the invitation. While the GfK/KnowledgePanel used to collect respondents consisted of a database of resident children, a further 279 households were screened ineligible (for example, the expected youth did not reside in the household), equivalent to about 7% of the responding sample. The 2,354 completed youth surveys represent a participation rate of 50% among eligible households. A somewhat larger group of parents agreed to do the baseline survey (n=2,645); 2,354 of the children of these parents completed a baseline survey.

If the recipient parent or adult caregiver (PCG) consented to participate, a web survey algorithm randomly chose an eligible child in that household to participate in the study. Next, the participating child and PCG received an invitation by e-mail to complete the surveys, which were presented sequentially with child assent required prior to child participation. For the youth survey, the PCG consent rate (for self and child participation) was 82.6%, and the child assent rate was 98.3%. Communications with the PCG stressed the importance of allowing the selected child to complete the survey privately. While the 40-minute youth survey was available in English or Spanish, few youth respondents selected the Spanish option (n=128, 5%). Each youth and parent was provided a small cash incentive ($10 each) for completing the baseline survey.

At each data collection wave, GfK reviewed the STRiV cohort status to prepare invitations for those who remained active Knowledge Panelists and those who had withdrawn from the KnowledgePanel (i.e., accepting no new studies) but remained active in the STRiV study; a small group of respondents who had withdrawn permanently from the KnowledgePanel and all ongoing studies were lost to follow-up. Households were offered a $20 incentive for completing the baseline surveys through the GfK points system.

Respondents to the National Survey on Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV) were recruited from the GfK/KnowledgePanel, a national household address-based probability sample (50,000+ members ages 18 and older) of the United States. A full description of the panel is available from GfK.

From an address-based sampling (ABS) frame covering approximately 97% of U.S. households, randomly sampled households were invited to join KnowledgePanel through postal invitations (English and Spanish) and by telephone follow-up. Using dual sample frames, panel members were further recruited via listed and unlisted telephone numbers, telephone and non-telephone households, and cell phone only households, as well as households with and without internet access. To assure national representativeness, researchers applied the KnowledgePanel statistical weights (see "Weights" below).

Longitudinal: Panel

US households with at least one resident youth age 10-18.

Individual

STRiV includes the following variables:

  • demographic variables (gender, age, race/ethnicity, language, education, employment status, U.S. Census region, metropolitan area, and Internet access);
  • household composition including gender and age of all children between ages of 10 and 18;
  • parent's characterization of child's traits (e.g. athletic, angry, often upset);
  • parent's characterization of relationship with child and partner;
  • parent's beliefs about child's current or future dating behavior;
  • parent's opinions about and/or perpetration of behaviors related to intimate partner violence
  • child's characterization of relationship with parent;
  • child's characterization of child's traits (e.g. even-tempered, angry)
  • child's beliefs about dating relationships, including balance of power (e.g. girls should have the same freedom as boys);
  • child's relationship experience;
  • child's opinions about behaviors related to intimate partner violence;
  • child's experiences with intimate partner violence (victimization and/or perpetration);
  • child's experiences with sexual harassment and abuse (victimization and/or perpetration);
  • child's participation in illegal activities;
  • child's characterization of major friendships;
  • 50% of eligible households participated in the baseline survey. 62.5% of households completing the baseline survey also participated in the Wave 2 follow-up. The Wave 3 response rate of youth baseline respondents was 70.5% and the Wave 4 response rate of youth baseline respondents was 69.5%. The Wave 5 response rate of youth baseline respondents was 61.3% and the Wave 6 response rate of youth baseline respondents was 67.6%.

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    2017-06-30

    2023-02-13 Added Wave 5 and Wave 6 datasets

    2021-10-18 Added an additional dataset: STRiV Secondary Data

    2019-10-29 Waves 1 and 2 were originally released as part of NACJD's Fast Track Release. As part of the release of Waves 3 and 4, the data for Waves 1 and 2 has received further curation, and is now available in all data packages. No data has been modified, and previously-available documentation has simply been organized differently.

    2018-02-15 The citation of this study may have changed due to the new version control system that has been implemented. The previous citation was:

    • Taylor, Bruce, Elizabeth Mumford, Weiwei Liu, and Peggy Giordano. The National Survey of Teen Relationships and Intimate Violence (STRiV), [United States], 2013-2020. ICPSR36499-v4. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2023-02-13. http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36499.v4

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    Provided in the datasets are panel base weights for youth and parent/caregiver that take into account a range of sampling and non-sampling error (e.g., non-response to panel recruitment and panel attrition), and was employed in a probability proportional to size (PPS) selection method for drawing sub-samples from KnowledgePanel. Using U.S. Census demographic and geographic distributions, a sample-specific post-stratification process was conducted (applying an iterative raking procedure) to adjust for survey nonresponse and elements related to the study-specific sample design (oversampling households with youth), resulting in a weighted sample distribution at baseline (wave 1) that approximates the 2010 U.S Census estimates, and adjusts for nonresponse at each subsequent wave.

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    Notes

    • The public-use data files in this collection are available for access by the general public. Access does not require affiliation with an ICPSR member institution.

    • One or more files in this data collection have special restrictions. Restricted data files are not available for direct download from the website; click on the Restricted Data button to learn more.