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A Life Too Short: Child death by homicide in New Zealand: An examination of incidence and statutory child protection actions.Doolan, Michael Patrick January 2004 (has links)
Using secondary analysis methodology - a statistical analysis of Police data - this study examines the annual incidence and patterns of child (0-14 years) death by homicide in New Zealand in the decade 1991-2000, and identifies the similarities and differences ofthese with an earlier New Zealand study and with international patterns. The study then determines the number of victims of child homicide with whom the New Zealand child care and protection service had had significant contact during the years 1996-2000, this period being chosen because of the availability of comprehensive case records. The report describes the New Zealand child care and protection legislative scheme and delineates the phases of an investigation undertaken by the Department of Child Youth and Family Services, identifying the possible practice errors attendant with each phase. Using qualitative analysis of case reviews undertaken by the Department of Child Youth and Family Services, the study investigates when deaths have occurred: during intake and prior to investigation; during an investigation; or during an intervention; and identifies the incidence of practice error. The findings of the two parts of the study are integrated using a systems perspective that discusses the influences of family, professional, organisational and community systems on child homicide. The report concludes with the implications of this analysis for child care and protection policy, practice and research. The findings of the study are discussed together with the implications for child protection practice.
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Mothers who kill their children : a literature reviewDavies, Leisha 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Psychology))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Maternal filicide, the murder of a child by its mother, is a complex phenomenon with various
causes and characteristics. Research, by means of the development of several classification
systems and in identifying particular risk factors, has been conducted with the aim of better
prevention of this emotionally evocative crime. Various disciplines have offered a wide range of
perspectives on why women kill their biological children. These are intended to yield a better
understanding of the aetiology of this crime. This literature review delineates three dominant
perspectives: psychiatric, psychological, and sociological. The main findings of each perspective
are discussed. However, these three perspectives frequently operate in conjunction with each
other in that both intrapsychic and interpersonal dynamics play a role in acts of maternal filicide.
The most vulnerable women appear to be those who have had a severely deficient developmental
history (trauma and/or grossly inadequate parenting), those who experience current difficult
psychosocial circumstances, and those who have been diagnosed with a psychiatric illness.
However, not all women who experience such problems kill their children. In this regard,
individual differences have an important role to play and more carefully delineated future
research is suggested. One of the most significant findings of this literature review is that there
appears to be a paucity of systematic research on the South African phenomenon of parental child
homicide. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Moedermoord, die moord van ’n kind deur sy of haar moeder, is ’n komplekse verskynsel met
verskeie oorsake en karaktereienskappe. Navorsing deur die ontwikkeling van verskeie
klassifikasiestelsels en die identifisering van spesifieke risikofaktore is uitgevoer met die doel om
hierdie misdaad, wat soveel emosies ontlok, beter te voorkom. Verskeie dissiplines bied ’n wye
verskeidenheid perspektiewe oor die redes waarom vroue hul biologiese kinders vermoor. Die
doel van hierdie perspektiewe is om ’n beter etiologiese begrip van hierdie vorm van misdaad te
verkry. Die literatuurstudie dui drie dominante perspektiewe aan: psigiatries, psigologies en
sosiologies. Die hoofbevindinge van elke perspektief word bespreek. Hierdie drie perspektiewe
werk dikwels saam aangesien sowel intrapsigiese en interpersoonlike dinamiek ’n rol in
moedermoorddade speel. Die kwesbaarste vroue blyk dié te wees met ’n ernstig gebrekkige
ontwikkelingsgeskiedenis (trauma en/of ernstig onvoldoende ouerskap), diegene wat hulle in
moeilike psigososiale omstandighede bevind, en dié wat met ’n psigiatriese siekte gediagnoseer
is. Nie alle vroue wat hierdie probleme ervaar, vermoor egter hulle kinders nie. In hierdie opsig
speel individuele verskille ’n belangrike rol en word versigtig afgebakende toekomstige
navorsing voorgestel. Een van die belangrikste bevindinge van hierdie literatuuroorsig is dat daar
’n gebrek aan sistematiese navorsing oor die Suid-Afrikaanse verskynsel van kindermoord deur
ouers blyk te wees.
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Synderskan och lagen: Barnamord i tre Norrlandslän 1830-1870Johansson, Gun-Britt January 2006 (has links)
<p>ABSTRACT</p><p>Many studies have been conducted on infanticide and child homicide. Researchers have approached the subject with different theoretical frameworks and explored it from different dimensions, geographical areas, and time periods. As much as the questions have varied so have the answers. This study contributes to greater clarity on the causes of infanticide. Despite numerous studies on the subject, there is still no consensus its causes. My aim has been to combine different strategies for understanding the subject. I have used material both from an aggregated level and from an individual level. The main question I sought to answer was whether social causes rather than individual factors force or trigger women to kill their newborn child? Court material also provides for an in-depth understanding of our history. The social sciences have frequently drawn sketches of the social world with big lines. These lines have been necessary and useful to point at large-scale transformations of civilisation and modernisation but, in terms of understanding real life, they can provide us with a foggy and even mistaken picture. When social scientists enter the historical archives and similar sources, we often blunder in its richness and variation. Society may, in any case, have always been complicated and the every day life for each person as well.</p><p>My findings show that infanticide signals low tolerance. In general, the women did not want to kill their own children. Moreover, my findings, like the results of other studies before mine, demonstrate that women who carry out infanticide represent normal women. To my knowledge, there isn’t one study on infanticide that claims the women were not normal. Women who committed infanticide did so out of fear: fear of losing their social bonds. They killed their children if the existence of the bonds was endangered or threatened. Often social bonds were related to their work situation as maids in farming households. If they couldn’t stay in the household after having the baby, many women had no where else to go. Their parents – poor, elderly or deceased – were unable to help. Sometimes the social bonds were threatened by other factors, often related to the child’s father. If he was already married or had a close relation with the woman’s family, their relationship could in fact, break her bonds to her own family and other relatives. Some women already had an illegitimate child. With a child out of wedlock, they had a difficult time getting work and housing. If they got pregnant again and the father to the new child refused to marry her or to support the child, she could in fact lack any resources for handling the situation.</p><p>Finally: the findings talk about honour and infanticide. It was always shameful to get a child out of wedlock. But demographic research from North of Sweden has shown that these children had almost the same chances of survival during their first year as legitimate children. Sexuality outside marriage was not respected but much discussion around honour was more related to how the women would manage with the child. In my findings, shame seems to be related to having no support. Extramarital relations were not accepted but people probably didn’t care to much about it as far as they managed on their own. Being rejected, helpless, not able to work and not able to take care of the child that was what shame was about.</p><p>Keywords: Infanticide, child homicide, illegitimacy, social bonds, shame</p>
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Synderskan och lagen: Barnamord i tre Norrlandslän 1830-1870Johansson, Gun-Britt January 2006 (has links)
ABSTRACT Many studies have been conducted on infanticide and child homicide. Researchers have approached the subject with different theoretical frameworks and explored it from different dimensions, geographical areas, and time periods. As much as the questions have varied so have the answers. This study contributes to greater clarity on the causes of infanticide. Despite numerous studies on the subject, there is still no consensus its causes. My aim has been to combine different strategies for understanding the subject. I have used material both from an aggregated level and from an individual level. The main question I sought to answer was whether social causes rather than individual factors force or trigger women to kill their newborn child? Court material also provides for an in-depth understanding of our history. The social sciences have frequently drawn sketches of the social world with big lines. These lines have been necessary and useful to point at large-scale transformations of civilisation and modernisation but, in terms of understanding real life, they can provide us with a foggy and even mistaken picture. When social scientists enter the historical archives and similar sources, we often blunder in its richness and variation. Society may, in any case, have always been complicated and the every day life for each person as well. My findings show that infanticide signals low tolerance. In general, the women did not want to kill their own children. Moreover, my findings, like the results of other studies before mine, demonstrate that women who carry out infanticide represent normal women. To my knowledge, there isn’t one study on infanticide that claims the women were not normal. Women who committed infanticide did so out of fear: fear of losing their social bonds. They killed their children if the existence of the bonds was endangered or threatened. Often social bonds were related to their work situation as maids in farming households. If they couldn’t stay in the household after having the baby, many women had no where else to go. Their parents – poor, elderly or deceased – were unable to help. Sometimes the social bonds were threatened by other factors, often related to the child’s father. If he was already married or had a close relation with the woman’s family, their relationship could in fact, break her bonds to her own family and other relatives. Some women already had an illegitimate child. With a child out of wedlock, they had a difficult time getting work and housing. If they got pregnant again and the father to the new child refused to marry her or to support the child, she could in fact lack any resources for handling the situation. Finally: the findings talk about honour and infanticide. It was always shameful to get a child out of wedlock. But demographic research from North of Sweden has shown that these children had almost the same chances of survival during their first year as legitimate children. Sexuality outside marriage was not respected but much discussion around honour was more related to how the women would manage with the child. In my findings, shame seems to be related to having no support. Extramarital relations were not accepted but people probably didn’t care to much about it as far as they managed on their own. Being rejected, helpless, not able to work and not able to take care of the child that was what shame was about. Keywords: Infanticide, child homicide, illegitimacy, social bonds, shame
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Sexual Murderers of Children: Developmental, Precrime, Crime, and Postcrime FactorsBeauregard, Eric, Stone, Maryann R., Proulx, Jean, Michaud, Patrick 01 January 2008 (has links)
The amount of empirical research on men who commit sexual murders is scarce, and no distinction has been made between those who have victimized adults and those who have victimized children. Therefore, to better understand specifically sexual murderers of children (n = 11), comparisons were performed with a group of sexual murderers of adult women (n = 66) on developmental, precrime, crime, and postcrime factors. It appears that sexual murderers of children are more often victims of sexual abuse during childhood and present more often deviant sexual fantasies as compared to sexual murderers of women. The results show also that sexual murderers of children more often use pornography prior to crime, have contact with the victim prior to crime, and commit a crime more often characterized by premeditation, strangulation, the hiding of the body, and its dismemberment than the sexual murderers of women.
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Differences Between Male Perpetrators of Child HomicidePerez-Morina, Isabel 01 January 2008 (has links)
The scientific study of child abuse and infanticide is a relatively young practice in the field of medicine, psychiatry and psychology, and although the role of parents in child homicide has been studied, minimal research has focused on the role of the male paramour, or the child's mother's boyfriend, as the perpetrator of child homicides. This study aimed to examine the differences between male paramours and biological fathers who kill children and hypothesized that biological fathers or step-fathers are significantly more likely than the child's mother's male paramour to kill their children due to relationship factors between the perpetrator and the child's mother, specifically and for the purpose of this study in the context of domestic violence. Child homicides committed by male paramours, in comparison, are more likely to have resulted from factors that are individually or child-centered. Decedent children ages 0-17 that were killed at the hands of their biological father, male-stepfather, or biological mother's male paramours between the years 1999 through 2005 in Miami-Dade County were be studied. The age of the perpetrators and child victims killed by the two groups were compared using an independent samples t-test, with a significance level set at .05. The two groups of male perpetrators were compared on prior domestic violence histories, prior criminal histories, evidence of prior trauma to the child, and perpetration of multiple homicide and post-incident suicide using a chi-square test, with a significance level set of .05. Significant differences were found between the two groups. Specifically, paramours are significantly more likely to be younger than biological fathers and children killed by paramours are more likely to evidence prior trauma. Further, biological fathers are significantly more likely to have a history of domestic violence, as a perpetrator, engage in multiple killings, and commit suicide after perpetrating the child death. The study demonstrates the need for prevention resources to target the two groups differently, to be most effective in prevention. The study also demonstrates the need for more extensive research comparing differences child homicide versus child abuse and in those that perpetrate the two. Lastly, it should inform public policy and the law and how these are applied to cases of domestic violence and child welfare.
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Motives for child homicide by mothers incarcerated in four correctional centres in South AfricaMalope, N. F. January 2014 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Psychology)) -- University of Limpopo / The aim of the current study was to explore and describe the views on child homicide by mothers. The qualitative research approach, and in particular the phenomenological method of inquiry was used. A sample of seventeen mothers (with ages ranging from thirteen to fifty three years) was drawn from four female correctional centres in South Africa, namely; Thohoyandou (Limpopo Province), Polokwane (Limpopo Province), Johannesburg correctional centre (Gauteng Province) and Durban Westville correctional centre (KwaZulu-Natal Province). The sample was obtained through purposive sampling. All the participants were interviewed using in-depth semi-structured interviews. Data were analyzed using the phenomenological method.
The themes that emerged from data analysis were: a) Motives for child homicide; b) Type of methods used in child homicide; and, c) Pre- and post-homicidal ideations and behaviour. The study revealed that there were different motives leading mothers to commit child homicide. These included: child homicide as a result of everyday stressors that the mothers encountered;child homicide as an act of altruism; child homicide to gain acceptance; perpetrators of child homicide as victims of abuse; child homicide as accidental; child homicide attributed to witchcraft; and, mental illness as amotive for child homicide.
The study also highlighted different types of methods used by the mothers to commit child homicide. The methods included: the use of weapons; hitting, dropping and strangling; suffocation; drowning; and, poisoning. The findings also suggested that pre-homicidal ideations and behaviour of the participants were associated with anger, depression, frustration and self blame. The participants showed post-homicidal ideations and behaviour such as remorse, regret and guilt, whilst others felt a sense of relief and were somehow hopeful about the future. The study is concluded by making recommendations for further research on child homicide based on larger samples.
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Motives for child homicide by mothers incarcerated in four correctional centres in South AfricaMalope, Nthabiseng Franciska January 2014 (has links)
Thesis (M. A. (Psychology)) --University of Limpopo, 2014 / The aim of the current study was to explore and describe the views on child homicide by mothers. The qualitative research approach, and in particular the phenomenological method of inquiry was used. A sample of seventeen mothers (with ages ranging from thirteen to fifty three years) was drawn from four female correctional centres in South Africa, namely; Thohoyandou (Limpopo Province), Polokwane (Limpopo Province), Johannesburg correctional centre (Gauteng Province) and Durban Westville correctional centre (KwaZulu-Natal Province). The sample was obtained through purposive sampling. All the participants were interviewed using in-depth semi-structured interviews. Data were analyzed using the phenomenological method.
The themes that emerged from data analysis were: a) Motives for child homicide; b) Type of methods used in child homicide; and, c) Pre- and post-homicidal ideations and behaviour. The study revealed that there were different motives leading mothers to commit child homicide. These included: child homicide as a result of everyday stressors that the mothers encountered;child homicide as an act of altruism; child homicide to gain acceptance; perpetrators of child homicide as victims of abuse; child homicide as accidental; child homicide attributed to witchcraft; and, mental illness as amotive for child homicide.
The study also highlighted different types of methods used by the mothers to commit child homicide. The methods included: the use of weapons; hitting, dropping and strangling; suffocation; drowning; and, poisoning. The findings also suggested that pre-homicidal ideations and behaviour of the participants were associated with anger, depression, frustration and self blame. The participants showed post-homicidal ideations and behaviour such as remorse, regret and guilt, whilst others felt a sense of relief and were somehow hopeful about the future. The study is concluded by making recommendations for further research on child homicide based on larger samples.
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Entre pais e filhos : praticas judiciais nos crimes em familia / Between parents and children : judiciary practices on family crimesFeriani, Daniela, 1983- 12 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Guita Grin Debert / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-12T15:41:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
Feriani_Daniela_M.pdf: 1784178 bytes, checksum: 175cb18dc49016167b1f97435cbf3d1a (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2009 / Resumo: Este trabalho busca refletir sobre a violência familiar no âmbito do Direito Penal. Para isso, analisei os processos de homicídio e tentativa de homicídio entre pais e filhos tramitados no Fórum de Campinas no período de 1982 a 2002, além de assistir audiências, julgamentos e realizar entrevistas. O objetivo foi apreender as práticas judiciais, ou seja, os argumentos e as estratégias de advogados, promotores e juízes no julgamento desses crimes. A partir de uma análise comparativa com os crimes entre casais, mostro como pais que matam seus filhos e maridos que matam suas esposas podem ser lidos em um pólo masculino através das noções de autoridade e honra, respectivamente, enquanto que filhos que matam seus pais e esposas que matam seus maridos estariam em um pólo feminino pelas figuras da loucura, de um lado, e da defesa da vida, de outro. Contrariando alguns estudos sobre violência doméstica que explicam as sentenças favoráveis ao réu a partir de uma tentativa, por parte da justiça, de defender a família, mostro como é outra visão sobre as relações familiares que está em jogo: não se trata de preservar ou defender, apesar de ser esta a retórica dos advogados nos processos criminais, mas de expulsar a família do sistema de justiça ao reconhecê-la como um palco de conflitos insolúveis que desafia a capacidade do Direito Penal de reintegrar o crime numa ordem simbólica e de dar-lhe um sentido à luz da distinção entre o bem e o mal. Assim, os crimes entre pais e filhos ora são arremessados para o reino da psiquiatria, ora são devolvidos à família, com a absolvição do réu. / Abstract: This work intends to reflect about the family violence in the Sphere of the Criminal law. In order to do so, I have analyzed murder and murder attempt indictments between parents and children conducted at Campinas Forum in the period from 1982 to 2002, and I have also watched hearings, trials and performed interviews. The goal was to learn the judicial practices, in other words, the reasoning and strategies used by lawyers and judges on the trials of these crimes. Beginning with a comparative analyses with the crimes between couples, I show how parents that murder their children and husbands that murder their lives can be read in a masculine pole through notions of authority and honor, respectively, while the children that murder their parents and wives that murder their husbands would be on a feminine pole through the figure of madness, on one side, and of life defense on the other. Contradicting some studies regarding domestic violence that explain the sentences in favor of the defendant in an attempt by the Justice to defend the family, I show here another view over the family relations at stack: it is not about preserving or defending, despite the fact that this is the rhetoric employed by the lawyers on the criminal processes, but expel the family from the justice system when acknowledging it as a stage for insoluble conflicts that challenge the capability of the criminal justice of reintegrating the crime on a symbolical order and give it a meaning in face of the distinction between the good and evil. Thereby, the crimes between parents and children nevertheless are thrown towards the psychiatry field and other times are given back to the family with the discharge of the defendant. / Mestrado / Mestre em Antropologia Social
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