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Essays 301 - 330
In thirty pages this paper discusses physical, sexual, and verbal spousal abuse in America and then considers its impact upon Las ...
Spousal abuse -- which is defined as "a pattern of assaultive and coercive behaviors including physical, sexual, and psychological...
2009"). In responding to the crisis, the city government has not recognized the way in which "policies, and structural factors hav...
setting so that it, too, reveals the contours of life instead of appearing as flat as the printed page. Lisa Brassard Mayer was n...
to criminal issues were not sufficient to address computer fraud. To an extent, wire and mail fraud issues were addressed in the p...
years, but it is difficult due to the different methodologies employed. What seems to be the case is that it is not easy to know h...
more male victims than non-clerical abusers. The fact that clerics had a lower offense rate in general suggests to the authors tha...
penalties for the abuse. In too many cases involving traditional native peoples, however, this also means that the victim is sepa...
have been abused themselves will inevitably abuse others if in fact they do not get help. Simpson (2000) writes: "In those familie...
context notes the need for investigative teams to help differentiate whether abuse and/or neglect served as a direct cause of deat...
in the testimony that is presented and many of these cases illuminate the inconsistencies and short comings that exist within the ...
a nurse to determine which elderly patients are being abused because a sense of shame or a desire to protect the family member who...
71). This seems to be particularly true for black women, who get caught between the double bind of being female in a male dominate...
abuse anyway? Does it mean beating another human being exclusively or can other physically violent acts qualify? In studying this ...
1879, closely followed by the Johns Hopkins University in the US in 1883. in 1890 James Cattell developed psychological tests, dev...
to the specifics of the abuse. Denov (2004), for example, reports that the long term impacts of sexual abuse in children include ...
Not only are the direct health impacts to the nurse deleterious, impaired nurses cannot meet their responsibility to provide top q...
eligibility is determined by age and health status. Implementation difficulties reflect the perpetual absence of adequate funding...
Given that serious depression too often leads to suicide, it is a problem that simply cannot be ignored. Numerous factors enter i...
or other individual. The goal of child welfare services is to provide an array of prevention and intervention services to children...
that "as a consequence of their illness they may find themselves living in marginal neighborhoods where drug use prevails" (Hatfie...
an overseeing entity be in place that looks out for the interest of those that cannot look out for themselves....
harm in which a child sustains physical damage and emotional harm in which the charge is endangered psychologically. This harm ca...
two of which occurred while she was incarcerated (Ackerman, 2004). Psychiatric patients are forbidden to engage in sex, "but San...
the increased propensity of our nations youth to use drugs can be traced back to the same root reasons as the other problems which...
the issues, and potential solutions, for domestic violence more understandable. These methodologies are only applicable, however,...
(Jacobs, 1997). It was founded by the Quakers and came about because of the concern regarding the conditions of the prisons (Jacob...
the Catholic Church and in work communities. Juans mother, Marianna, lives a block away and spends time with the children after s...
media campaign and treatment received the least (32 percent), (Drug Policy Foundation [DPF], 2000; ONDCP, 2000). A RAND study indi...
told repeatedly that one is "stupid" or "lazy" or "useless." Children internalize this message and consider themselves to be all t...