£109.50
Young People Using Family Violence
International Perspectives on Research, Responses and Reforms
Overview
This book examines the use of violence by children and young people in family settings and proposes specialised and age-appropriate responses to these children and young people. It interrogates the adequacy and effectiveness of current service and justice system responses, including analysis of police, court and specialist service responses. It proposes new approaches to children and young people who use violence that are evidence-based, non-punitive, and informed by an understanding of the complexity of needs and the importance of age-appropriate service responses.
Key Questions
Bringing together a range of Australian and international experts, it sheds new light on questions such as: How can we best understand and respond to the use of family violence by young people? To what extent do traditional family violence responses address the experiences of adolescents who use violence in family settings? What barriers to help seeking exist for parental and sibling victims of adolescent family violence? To what degree do existing support and justice services provide adequate responses to those using adolescent family violence and their families? In what circumstances do children kill their biological and adopted parents?
Relevance
The explicit focus on child and adolescent family violence produces new knowledge in the area of family violence, which will be of relevance to academics, policymakers, and family violence practitioners in Australia and internationally.