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What is the best way to work with fathers who have a history of
abusive behavior? This question is among the thorniest that social
service and criminal justice professionals must deal with in their
careers, and in this essential new work Jeffrey L. Edleson, Oliver
J. Williams, and a group of international colleagues examine the
host of equally difficult issues that surround it.
Beginning with the voices of mothers and fathers who speak about
men's contact with and parenting of their children, the authors
then examine court and mental health services perspectives on how
much involvement violent men should have in their children's lives.
The second half of the book showcases programs such as the
Boston-based Fathering After Violence initiative and the Caring
Dads program in Canada, which introduce non-abusive parenting
concepts and skills to batterers and have developed useful
guidelines for intervention with these fathers.
Visionary but also practical, Parenting by Men Who Batter distills
the most relevant policy issues, research findings, and practice
considerations for those who coordinate batterer programs or work
with families, the courts, and the child welfare system. It guides
professionals in understanding men who batter, assessing their
parenting skills, making decisions about custody and visitation,
and modeling treatment programs that engage fathers in their
children's lives while maximizing safety.
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