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Child Abuse & Neglect - Perceptions, Psychological Consequences & Coping Strategies (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,291
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Child Abuse & Neglect - Perceptions, Psychological Consequences & Coping Strategies (Hardcover)
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Child abuse and neglect (CAN) continues to be a serious public
health problem in the United States, affecting approximately 19% of
victims and costing approximately $124 billion to society. When a
child is removed from their parent's custody due to parental abuse
or neglect, the child is sometimes placed in temporary custody
through dependency court. Difficult and emotionally laden legal
decisions occur within dependency court, including determining
whether (and where) a child should be temporarily placed or whether
a child should be returned to the parent's custody. Over 6 million
children experienced some type of child maltreatment in 2013, with
144,000 receiving foster care services (Child Maltreatment, 2013).
Legal decision-makers, including judges, case workers, and social
workers have the important task of determining what placement is in
the best interest of the child. What factors shape decisions in
child custodial cases? Chapter One of this book reviews empirical
evidence suggesting that the race of the child and parent plays a
role in shaping child custodial decisions. Chapter Two presents a
feminist, social constructionist theoretical conceptualisation,
entitled relational trust theory, that describes the effects of
gendered power dynamics on the perception of the other partner as
trustworthy in adult-survivor couple interactions; and expounds on
the findings of a longitudinal grounded theory study that
identified clinical processes of Socio-Emotional Relationship
Therapy (SERT) that helped adult-survivor couples transform their
gendered power disparities and engage in relationally safe ways
that supported a trusting emotional culture. Chapter Three provides
a description of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT), a
rationale for its use with parents and children who have
experienced CAN, and an overview of PCIT's evidence base for both
intervening with and preventing future CAN.
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