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Child Abuse

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Title: Child Abuse


1
Child Abuse
  • Anne Kennedy
  • CRMI003

2
Outline
  • Exam
  • Socialization
  • Childhood Experience
  • Family Abuse
  • Institutional Abuse
  • Summary Points

3
Exam Issues
  • Question
  • Students can bring in examples from media to
    illustrate points in the exam as long as it is
    relevant

4
Introduction
  • Ann Oakley wrote in 1994
  • childhood is not only something to be studied,
    it is something we all hold within us a set of
    memories, a collection of ideas (p.28).
  • Fundamental right of every child, to experience a
    childhood that promotes a positive sense of
    self-identity, self-respect and self-control.

5
Socialization
  • In 1970, Danzinger wrote, a child is socialized
    by belonging to a particular culture at a certain
    stage in its history (P.18)
  • Chief Executive of the Childrens Society We
    need to better understand the experiences of
    children in our society if we are to make the UK
    a better place for children to grow up in (2006)

6
  • For many children of all cultures and classes
    the dominating feature of childhood is that of
    powerlessness and lack of control over what
    happens to them (Lansdown, 199434).
  • Children are active in constructing their own
    social worlds and reflecting upon and
    understanding its meaning and significance to
    their own personal lives (France et al.,
    2000151 cited in Mullender et al., 20024).

7
  • Need to consider the messages that individuals
    take away from their life experiences and how
    this informs their understanding.

8
Definition
  • Childrens Act 1989 when someones actions have
    caused a child to suffer significant harm to
    their health or development
  • Significant harm
  • Punishing a child too much
  • Hitting or shaking a child
  • Constantly criticising, threatening or rejecting
  • Sexual interference with or assaulting a child
  • Not looking after a child not giving them
    enough to eat, ignoring them, not playing or
    talking with them or not making sure they are safe

9
  • Children are most at risk where they should be
    safest within their families. Children are in
    fact more likely to be murdered, physically
    assaulted, sexually abused, abducted and
    subjected to harmful traditional practices and
    mental violence by family members than by
    strangers
  • (Innocenti Digest, 1997 5).

10
  • Findings revealed by the Department of Health
    show that
  • On the 31st of March 2001 there were 26,800
    children on the child protection register in
    England, and that there were more boys than girls
    on the register at this time (2001a1).
  • In 2000/2001 this Department noted that, local
    authorities in England looked after 58,900
    children at the 31 March 2001
  • Of this figure 36,600 (62) of children in care
    at this time, were placed there as a result of
    abuse or neglect (2001b8)

11
  • UK parents are allowed to hit their children, as
    far as it doesnt leave a mark (Bhandari,
    20069)
  • Children not protected by law unless assault is
    judged to go beyond reasonable chastisement,
    usually meaning causing serious physical injury
    (Davis Bourhill, 199736-37).
  • Harsh physical punishment of children leads to
    development of emotional behavioural problems
  • Much abuse begins as physical punishment that
    goes too far (Nobes et al., 1999887).
  • Rarely is routine violence against children
    questioned. It is encouraged within families as
    an instrument of discipline punishment
    (Davis Bourhill, 199756).

12
  • Children, especially dependent children, are
    particularly vulnerable to forms of mental
    violence by parents and others ranging from
    verbal abuse, sarcasm and belittling, through
    forms of humiliation, harassment and isolation
    not involving physical violence (Innocent
    Digest, 19978-9).
  • In the abusive family environment, the exercise
    of parental power is arbitrary, capricious and
    absolute. Rules are erratic, inconsistent, or
    patently unfair (Herman, 200298).

13
  • Alternative forms of discipline such as
  • reasoning with the child or young person, and
    raising awareness of how their actions reflect on
    themselves and impact on others, suggest more
    appropriate methods of discipline.
  • In doing so, the fact that the parent does not
    exact retaliation implies a certain respect for
    the childs ability to take responsibility for
    his or her actions (Danzinger, 197799-100).

14
  • Kevin Browne Child Psychology Unit Liverpool
    University
  • One of the biggest predictors for child homicide
    is a history of violence in the parents
    background. And so one of the most significant
    risk factors that health visitors and midwives
    should be looking for is spouse abuse in the
    family prior to the arrival of the child.

15
  • At least 750,000 children a year witness
    domestic violence (DOH, 200316).
  • US - more than three million children are
    annually estimated to witness acts of domestic
    violence (McAlistair Groves, 1999124).
  • Veil of secrecy surrounds violence in families.
  • Intervention to protect their mothers has
    resulted in the child actually killing the
    abuser, albeit such cases are rare (Morley
    Mullender, 1994).

16
  • Child contact arrangements in England and Wales
    29 children in 13 families were killed in the
    period 1994 2004 (Saunders, 20044)
  • Figure could easily be a misrepresentation as the
    Government has not collected statistics on child
    contact homicides (Saunders, 20047).
  • To illustrate the inevitable vulnerability of
    children and young people caught up in such
    situations, several of these homicides occurred
    during over night stays (Saunders, 20045).

17
Impact?
  • What exactly does it mean for children to
    witness domestic violence? (McGee, 200061).
  • McAlistair Groves there is a need, to take
    account of the many ways children take in
    cultural messages about the use of violence
    (200221).

18
  • Young peoples attitudes to violence, sex and
    relationships 1 in 5 young men and 1 in 10
    young women thought that violence towards a
    partner was acceptable in some situations (Home
    Office, 200528).
  • The more violence is routinely used and
    witnessed in daily (public) life, and the more
    accepted and unchallenged its use, the more this
    provides a fertile ground for the use and
    acceptance of relationship violence (CRC,
    200113).

19
  • Context
  • Observing violence,
  • Hearing parents fighting and knowing mother is
    being hit but not directly observing the
    violence,
  • Observing outcomes (e.g., bruises on the mother)
    but not necessarily observing or hearing the
    violence directly,
  • Becoming aware (e.g., mother tells them about it)
    but not necessarily observing or hearing evidence
    of it, or,
  • Living in household in which violence occurs but
    not being aware of it (Jouriles et al., 200119).

20
  • Not all children young people affected.
  • Wolak and Finkelhor
  • Range of protective factors, which may help to
    explain their resilience
  • the characteristics of the child
  • the quality of family support
  • the quality of extrafamily support (199895).
  • Morley Mullender
  • Some children remain perfectly well adjusted
    despite living with abuse
  • Practitioners need a heightened awareness of
    possible problems but can never presume
    pathology (199427-28).

21
Institutional Care
  • Children looked after by placements
  • 38, 400 children were looked after in foster
    placements at 31 March 2001
  • 6, 400 children and young people were looked
    after in childrens homes 9including secure
    units
  • 3,400 children were placed for adoption
  • (DOH, 2000/2001)

22
Haut de la Garenne
  • Islands culture of secrecy (BBC News, February
    2008)
  • Police excavate bricked- up Colditz cellar at
    ex-childrens home amid fears it hides a mass
    grave (Mail on Sunday, February 2008)
  • Secrets behind childrens home (BBC News, 2008)
  • Former childcare home alleged child sex abuse
    over a 40-year period
  • Childs remains found at former orphanage

23
  • Jersey Child Abuse Inquiry
  • Largest paedophile investigation since the war
    (approx 40 paedophiles)
  • 4 decades of paperwork
  • No scandal for the people of Jersey
  • Staff encouraged rape by other kids
  • Constant beatings
  • Staff were told but in denial
  • Paedophile - Santa at Jersey kids home

24
Discussion Points
  • Shocked by the apparent acceptance of threat to
    children
  • Jersey wasnt always as thorough in gathering
    vital evidence about what went on in its
    childrens homes
  • Oh, he carries the pillow so you cant hear the
    girls screaming
  • Things must have been known we talked about it
    I complained others complained for some
    reason they never took any action and thats just
    wrong

25
Discussion Points
  • Famous as a tax haven and a long history of
    discretion and secrecy. Now Panorama asks if this
    has led to victims allegations being ignored and
    those under suspicion escaping punishment

26
Summary
  • Dame Mary Marsh, Chief Executive NSPCC
  • The UK has been very slow in recognising the
    collective responsibility we have for the
    nations children and the fact that we should
    value them much more, we should respect them much
    more and care for them an awful lot better.

27
Final Thoughts
  • Society fails children and young people and is
    instrumental in sustaining the ideologies, which
    perpetuate such actions
  • Aim is to bring about a change in societal
    attitudes and traditional mind-sets, which have
    promoted and sustained children as second class
    citizens and therefore inconsequential.
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