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Physical Child Abuse (From Family Violence: Prevention and Treatment, P 25-55, 1993, Robert L. Hampton, Thomas P. Gullotta, et al., eds. - See NCJ-149818)

NCJ Number
149820
Author(s)
J S Milner; J L Crouch
Date Published
1993
Length
31 pages
Annotation
This chapter describes several explanatory models of physical child abuse and provides a representative literature review which reveals varying levels of support for the different models.
Abstract
There are currently several accepted models that attempt to specify the variables that contribute to physical child abuse. These can be categorized as early single factor models, early multifactor organizational models, biological models, learning models, social/cultural models, and interactional models. This chapter describes in detail transitional, cognitive-behavioral, and social information processing models. The literature review included in this chapter focuses on perpetrator, family, and sociological characteristics that are likely to be associated with the physical abuse of children. Finally, the article summarizes current empirical findings regarding the effects of physical child abuse across the life span phases including early childhood, middle childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. 2 tables and 127 references