About the Book
STM Learning’s Research and Practices in Child Maltreatment Prevention, Volume 2: Societal, Organizational, and International Approaches provides in-depth examinations of prevention models across social spheres. This comprehensive second volume includes chapters on the roles of community, corporate business, government, nonprofits, and research organizations in child abuse prevention.
Written by and for multidisciplinary professionals in medicine, law, social work, and public health, this all-new title is a vital resource for those working to prevent child abuse in all its forms. Readers across fields will benefit from an expansive collection of studies in the most up-to-date best practices in child abuse prevention and child safety.
Table of Contents:
SECTION I: COMMUNAL AND SOCIETAL PREVENTION
1. Preventing Child Maltreatment Through the Positive Community Norms Framework
2. The Power of Child Death Review to Prevent Maltreatment
3. Business: Increasing Involvement
4. Prevention Advocacy and Legislation
SECTION II: AGENCY AND ORGANIZATIONAL APPROACHES TO PREVENTION
5. Preventing Child Maltreatment United States Military Community
6. The Federal Government’s Role in Child Maltreatment Prevention:History and Current Efforts
7. National Organizations Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect Before They Occur
8. Children’s Advocacy Centers and Child Abuse Prevention: A Natural Fit
SECTION III: SELECTED MODELS OF PREVENTION
9. Early Home Visitation Services to Prevent Physical Child Abuse and Neglect
10. Strengthening Families Through Early Care and Education
11. Maltreatment Prevention Programming in Early Childhood: A Review of Models Delivered in Center-Based Settings
12. Shared Leadership®: An Innovative Approach to Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention
13. The PREVENT Program: A Public Health Approach
14. A Population Approach to the Prevention of Child Maltreatment: The Triple P—Positive Parenting Program System
15. SafeCare®: Preventing Child Neglect Through Scaling-Up and Examining Implementation Issues of an Evidence-Based Practice
SECTION IV: PREVENTION AMONG SPECIAL POPULATIONS
16. The Prevention of Maltreatment Among Children With Disabilities Through Early Identification and Comprehensive Provision of Services
17. Cultural Considerations in Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect
SECTION V: INTERNATIONAL APPROACHES TO PREVENTION
18. Children’s Rights to Prevention of and Protection From Violence and Maltreatment
19. Sure Star Local Programmes: Area-Based Preventative Intervention in England
20. Child Abuse Prevention in Canada
21. Child Abuse Prevention and Neglect Prevention: The Pakistani Scenario
22. Prevention of Child Abuse in Estonia
SECTION VI: CONCLUSION
23. The Future of Child Abuse Prevention
About the Author :
Randell Alexander is a professor of pediatrics at the University of Florida and the Morehouse School of Medicine. He currently serves as chief of the Division of Child Protection and Forensic Pediatrics and interim chief of the Division of Developmental Pediatrics at the University of Florida-Jacksonville. In addition, he is the statewide medical director of child protections teams for the Department of Health's Children's Medical Services and is part of the International Advisory Board for the National Center on Shaken Baby Syndrome. He has also served as vice chair of the US Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect, on the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect, and the boards of the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) and Prevent Child Abuse America. Randell Alexander has served on state child death review committees in Iowa, Georgia, and Florida, and two regional child death review committees. He is an active researcher, lectures widely, and testifies frequently in major child abuse cases throughout the country.
Review :
Research and Practices in Child Maltreatment Prevention is an in-depth and conceptually rich 2-volume set that reviews the history, present, and potential future of child maltreatment prevention. Prevention should be a top priority for every professional, agency, and institution addressing child maltreatment. Without the unified vision and effort of everyone involved in mitigating the terrible toll of child maltreatment, we risk the perception, and perhaps even the reality, of becoming a child abuse industry, merely processing victims and perpetrators rather than effecting the revolutionary social movement to ensure a better future for children, families, and societies that I, and most of my colleagues, envision.
With more than 80 contributors representing business, child advocacy, counseling, economics, education, government, law, medicine, psychology, public health, social science, and social work, these 2 volumes are the most current and comprehensive resource addressing child maltreatment prevention. Every private and public agency, educational department, hospital, library, and most professionals involved in the child maltreatment field should have ready access to this information, whether it be on their bookshelves or online. Thanks to Randy Alexander for leading this effort and to all the contributors for their dedication to a brighter tomorrow.
David L. Corwin, MD
Professor and Director of Forensic Services
Pediatrics Department
University of Utah School of Medicine
Board Chair
Academy on Violence and Abuse
Vice-President
American Professional Society on the
Abuse of Children
Salt Lake City, Utah
Research and Practices In Child Maltreatment Prevention, Volume 2: Societal, Organizational, and International Approaches is an invaluable resource for professionals from a variety of disciplines in child maltreatment prevention. It contains historical information and up-to-date research about the problem of child maltreatment. This expansive new reference provides the latest information and research about the tools, programs, and frameworks available to advance efforts in child maltreatment prevention across the social-ecological model. Through the expertise and perspective of its authors, it offers insight into the issues that make child abuse prevention such a complex issue.
Vicky Roper, MS
Director
Prevent Child Abuse Kansas
Kansas Children's Service League
Wichita, Kansas
In order to make real progress in child maltreatment prevention, professionals, policymakers, and advocates are often required to participate in fields far removed from their usual areas of expertise and move into the realms of marketing and communication, leadership transformation, or business decision-making. This collection, in detailing current best practices in child abuse prevention, offers inspiration for practitioners willing to do so.
Research and Practices in Child Maltreatment Prevention, Volume 2: Societal, Organizational, and International Approaches provides, among a variety of information, examples from a cross-section of preventive approaches that constitute an impressive foundation for practical applications of child advocacy. Readers are introduced to successful strategies, detailed and innovative case studies, and proven models with clearly illustrated guidelines and recommendations. Built on current evidence, this data-rich resource will inspire those working in the field to enhance current practices.
Anthea Simcock, ONZM
CEO
Child Matters
Hamilton, New Zealand