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This volume was prepared under the impetus of desperate need in academic institutions and clinical and social services for a comprehensive introduction to the diverse theories about child abuse and neglect etiologies. Although history documents maltreatment of children since the beginning of human civilization, formal recognition of the problem has been relatively recent. During the past three decades, professionals in various fields, especially medicine, psychiatry, social work, law, sociology, and psychology, have been involved in the identification, treatment, and prevention of child…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This volume was prepared under the impetus of desperate need in academic institutions and clinical and social services for a comprehensive introduction to the diverse theories about child abuse and neglect etiologies. Although history documents maltreatment of children since the beginning of human civilization, formal recognition of the problem has been relatively recent. During the past three decades, professionals in various fields, especially medicine, psychiatry, social work, law, sociology, and psychology, have been involved in the identification, treatment, and prevention of child victimization and its detrimental consequences. In studying the etiology of child maltreatment, many theoretical viewpoints have been proposed in the literature and used for clinical practice as well as academic research. The current work represents a comprehensive evaluation and integration of diverse theorizations concerning the abuse and neglect of children. The authors have compiled more than 40 theories, models, and perspectives from the literature. As the subtitle suggests, they describe individual theories, summarize across different theoretical views, and evaluate the current status of those theorizations. This volume is intended for three distinct audiences: practitioners, researchers, and the general public. Clinical practitioners will find it a source of strategies that can be applied in clinical settings. By documenting the absence of comprehensive, multidiscipinary-oriented theory development, it will encourage researchers toward refining existing theories through integration with other theoretical perspectives. For the general public, it provides insight into a troubling social problem.
Autorenporträt
OLIVER C.S. TZENG is Professor of Psychology at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis. He is also Director of the Osgood Laboratory for Cross-Cultural Research, the Graduate Applied Social Psychology program, the Consortium of Child Abuse and Neglect Resources and Information Services, and the Multidisciplinary Graduate Training Program on Child Abuse and Neglect. He coedited Language, Meaning and Culture: The Selected Papers of C. E. Osgood (Praeger, 1990) and Sourcebook of Child Abuse and Neglect. JAY W. JACKSON is a Research Associate of the Osgood Laboratory for Cross-Cultural Research. As assistant director of the Osgood Laboratory, he has made significant contributions to various social psychology and cross-cultural research projects, including topics on the etiology and prevention of child mistreatment, interethnic hostility, interpersonal aggression, family conflict resolution and prevention of and intervention in child abuse and neglect. HENRY C. KARLSON is a Professor of Law at Indiana University School of Law, and is chairman of the Multidisciplinary Graduate Training Program on child maltreatment at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. He taught the first law course dealing with child abuse and neglect in Indiana and has been active in legal educational programs relating to child maltreatment. He has made significant contributions to evaluation of child abuse and neglect issues from legal and historical perspectives.