YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Children and Abuse
Essays 91 - 120
be validated through other means (Science Daily , 2007). An overwhelming majority of victims who recover such memories are women. ...
by using standard PTSD models there is a limiting of the understanding of the conditions that are suffered and that there is the ...
with the humiliation and grief typically associated with child abuse. Indeed, children have no fewer rights than their adult coun...
the problem and to eliminate it where possible. Nester (1998) quantifies the extent of the problem relating that an estimated 1,2...
insomnia, eating disorders, headaches, TMJ, asthma, self-mutilation or self-harming behaviors, and chronic physical complaints(Bac...
barely notices when Florence enters the room. Dickens writes "They had been married ten years, and until this present day ...(they...
to as nuclear family emotional systems. According to this concept, the family acts as a "unitary whole," which is affected by two...
as theyre treated" (Burns, 2003). Human behavior is a complicated and curious equation. The answer to why a particular rea...
The booklet, "About Disciplining Your Child," provides an overview for parents of what constitutes appropriate disciplinary measur...
policy," with the goal of leveling out the population at 1.2 billion by the year 2000, and then bringing it down to 700 million ov...
addition to the alcoholism. She is a compulsive shopper and gambler. One of her twin daughters, Sarah, is pregnant and claims that...
little intrinsic value in society. No one would trust anyone else. A degree of trust is necessary in order to keep anarchy at bay....
children of alcoholics are more likely to experiment with alcohol at earlier ages than other children (Vail-Smith and Knight, 1994...
display in addition to the emotional trauma which remains long after the abuse has ended and the scars have healed. Children who h...
population believes that spanking is allowable, although there are also likely many of those individuals who would prefer spanking...
or other individual. The goal of child welfare services is to provide an array of prevention and intervention services to children...
In eight pages parental substance abuse and the lingering effects upon their children are discussed. Eleven sources are cited in ...
In seven pages child abuse is examined through a sociological assessment of its root causes. Five sources are cited in the biblio...
Socio-economic pressures may have a strong influence on the way in which children are treated within the family: the stresses of s...
forms of physical discipline and actual full-blown abuse (Gullatt, 1999). Twenty-six states have prohibitions against corporal pun...
In sixty pages twenty first century child abuse presents a statement of the problem, traces its history, provides a literature rev...
(Jacobs, 1997). It was founded by the Quakers and came about because of the concern regarding the conditions of the prisons (Jacob...
told repeatedly that one is "stupid" or "lazy" or "useless." Children internalize this message and consider themselves to be all t...
were perceived and what sort of behavior was considered appropriate in regards to children has changed considerably over the cours...
In a paper of five pages, the author reflects on an APA formatted research study on the impacts of child sexual abuse on girls and...
This essay presents the argument that Frankenstein's monster in Mary Shelley's novel is a sympathetic, sensitive character who is ...
these characteristics are the fact that women tend to bond more strongly with children then men do; they tend to prefer "older and...
Alcohol poses a direct risk as a result of the physical impact it has on the body. The use of alcohol is often seen as a social ...
This research paper relates "The Lost Boy," a memoir by David Pelzer, with research that pertains to child abuse. Nine pages in le...
This personal essay relates the abuse that a student suffered as a child and the factors that aided her survival. Five pages in l...