Understanding Abusive Families: An Ecological Approach to Theory and Practice

Front Cover
Wiley, Oct 10, 1997 - Family & Relationships - 273 pages
An up-to-date analysis of the factors contributing to abuse

This newly revised edition of a classic in the field of child abuseand neglect presents effective guidelines for prevention,protection, and rehabilitation.

Compelling and compassionate, this book explores why and howfamilies become abusive. It then offers both the wisdom andspecific clinical interventions that will aid in the understandingof abuser and victim.

Understanding Abusive Families offers cutting-edge information andprescriptions for change reagrding:

* the patterns of incidence and prevalence
* the community context of child abuse and the issue of socialsupport
* psychological and sexual maltreatment
* child abuse in institutional families
* the special issues involved in adolescent maltreatment

Contents

The Meaning of Maltreatment
3
The Scope and History of Child Abuse and Neglect 26
26
The Community Context of Child Abuse and Neglect
56
Parenting Family
86
The Elusive Crime of Psychological Maltreatment
101
Family Sexual Abuse
114
Child Maltreatment in Loco Parentis
131
The Maltreatment of Youth
145
Youth in Trouble Are Youth Who Have Been Hurt
166
Family Life Development
194
References
227
Copyright

About the author (1997)

JAMES GARBARINO is director of the Family Life Development Centerand professor of human development at Cornell University. He is theauthor of Raising Children in a Socially Toxic Environment (1995)from Jossey-Bass.

JOHN ECKENRODE is associate director of the Family Life DevelopmentCenter and professor of human development at Cornell University.

Bibliographic information