RT Article T1 ‘Not bullet proof’: The complex choice not to seek a civil protection order for intimate partner violence JF International review of victimology VO 27 IS 2 SP 173 OP 195 A1 Messing, Jill Theresa A1 Bagwell-Gray, Meredith E A1 Ward-Lasher, Allison A1 Durfee, Alesha A2 Bagwell-Gray, Meredith E A2 Ward-Lasher, Allison A2 Durfee, Alesha LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1751905306 AB Protection orders (POs) are one legal system resource available to survivors of intimate partner violence. Many survivors choose not to obtain a PO, yet prior research has not examined the perspectives of these survivors. This study examined the open-ended survey responses (n = 308) regarding the choice not to obtain a PO by survivors residing in emergency shelters in the United States. Content analysis indicated that many survivors made deliberate decisions to not seek safety through this venue. Survivors indicated that a PO may increase their partner’s violence, identified substantial barriers, evaluated a PO as unnecessary, preferred alternative strategies, were dealing with complex partner dynamics, and chose to protect their loved ones by not seeking a PO. Women with marginalized identities, in particular, indicated that there are multiple costs to seeking interventions within the legal system. Structural changes are needed within the legal system to facilitate access to justice for survivors. K1 legal interventions K1 Help-seeking K1 Intimate Partner Violence K1 Protection orders DO 10.1177/0269758021993338