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A family's deadly sin: Fatal child abuse in Florida, an anthropological perspective on child deaths due to abuse and neglectWilliams, Christa A 01 June 2006 (has links)
This thesis examines child death data in an effort to assist in prevention and intervention, as well as, to provide quantitative and qualitative analysis to improve and enhance policy development around child deaths due to abuse and neglect in florida. The data reviewed consisted of aggregate data for all incidents of child deaths (N = 266) in Florida where the primary caregiver was the alleged perpetrator of a child fatality for children under age 18. All data examined were recorded and stored in the Department of Children and Families' Child Safety Assessment database between 1998 and 2000. According to national and state data on maltreatment deaths, the number of physical abuse deaths are slightly higher than fatalities categorized as due to neglect (51% and 43%, respectively), and the remaining 6% are attributed to both abuse and neglect. The data suggest that mothers account for the greatest percentage of child deaths due to neglect, while fathers and other male careg
ivers are responsible for the greatest percentage of child fatalities due to physical abuse. There was no significant difference between child fatalities committed by biological fathers as opposed to other male caregivers, which suggests that policies around caregiver relationship has had limited impact on child safety. Describing and defining different kinds of maltreatment requires that attention be paid to historical and cultural environments. Policies for preventing or reducing child deaths requires understanding of risk factors and protective factors at the level of the individual, the family, the community, and the society. Whereas men and women differ in types of maltreatment they are likely to commit, the difference in rate of child fatalities committed by biological fathers as opposed to other male caregivers is insignificant. These findings suggest that policies that focus on caregiver relationship have limited impact on child safety. Anthropological holistic insight on the d
omains and factors that contribute to the increase in child deaths due to maltreatment may help to develop new policy initiatives. Until research advances our knowledge and that knowledge is used to set policies, and those polices properly implemented, children will continue to fall victim to maltreatment fatalities.
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Perspectives of young adolescent and mother dyads residing in family violence shelters : a qualitative study using life story methodsChanmugam, Amy Gardiner 10 April 2014 (has links)
This study provided a comprehensive picture of the lives of young adolescents (ages 12-14) and their mothers residing in emergency family violence shelters. It used qualitative Life Story methods emphasizing a holistic, contextualized, chronological approach to gain deeper insight into experiences as told from the emic perspectives of individuals who have lived them, with research questions addressing relationships, intimate partner violence (IPV), coping, and views of the future. The study was prompted by the prevalence of childhood exposure to adult IPV with 15.5 million American children/adolescents exposed annually, the risks of IPV exposure, and the paucity of first-person perspectives in existing research. Research focusing on adolescents is especially lacking. The study was informed by social cognitive and family systems theories and an ecological/resilience framework. An ethnically diverse, purposive sample of 14 young adolescent-mother dyads (N= 27) was recruited from four Texas shelters. Youth and mothers were interviewed separately using a semi-structured interview guide. They completed standardized measures of IPV exposure level and youth psychological adjustment. Interviews were analyzed using thematic and categorical-content analysis. Four staff interviews at recruitment sites added context. Results revealed high levels of IPV exposure, poverty, parental incarceration, child maltreatment, residential instability, school transitions and maternal health problems. Seven themes were prominent in youths’ life stories, with the most prevalent concerning lifelong frequent moves, highly cohesive family boundaries, and loss and fear. Other themes concerned evolution in youths’ thinking about family issues, complex feelings about adult males, centrality of physical child abuse, and the influence of parental crack cocaine abuse in their lives. Numerous quotes voice participants’ strengths in spite of adversities. Youth typically framed experiences in terms of how they affected daily living, with IPV interwoven with the broader themes. Youth described key relationships, perceptions of fathers, general coping strategies, situational coping with IPV (including safety planning behaviors), perspectives on shelters, potential protective factors, and views of the future. Mothers’ interviews expanded interpretation of youth narratives. Results compare youth-mother perspectives. Implications are discussed for theory, research, and social work practice, including practice in emergency shelters, schools, substance abuse treatment programs, law enforcement and CPS. / text
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Is chronic illness associated with the occurrence of intimate partner violence?Cheng, Ka-ki., 鄭家祺. January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Nursing Studies / Master / Master of Nursing in Advanced Practice
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Accountability in street-level bureaucracy: the case of frontline government social worker in the field ofdomestic violenceLi, Wing-yee, Winnie, 李穎宜 January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Public Administration / Master / Master of Public Administration
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Intimate partner violence and chronic pain among Chinese womenChan, Chee-hon., 陳之翰. January 2010 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Nursing Studies / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Domestic conflict and coping strategies among Korean immigrant women in the United StatesLee, Eunju 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Adolescent mothers negotiating development in the context of interpersonal violence (IPV) and gendered narratives: a qualitative studyKulkarni, Shanti Joy 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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An exploratory study on the factors to facilitate the victims for leaving domestic violenceWong, Siu-wai, 黃小慧 January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Criminology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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A study of the impact on children who exposed to parental violenceTong, Mai-mai, Amy., 唐美美. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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The prevalence of domestic violence among the female Chinese population in the accident and emergency department梁寶珊, Leung, Po-shan, Melissa. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Nursing Studies / Master / Master of Nursing in Advanced Practice
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