Child Abuse
Domestic violence is a prevalent problem in today's society. While it is easy to see what impact it has on the actual victim, it is oftentimes difficult to see the effect it has on children witnessing these acts of violence. Research done in the field of domestic violence suggests that children (under the age of 19) exposed to domestic violence grow up to either become abusers or to become victims of spousal abuse. The researcher will be studying domestic violence because she wants to know if (and how) exposure to domestic violence as a child leads to that child being an abuser as an adult. This is an important study because if the implications of the exposure to domestic violence can be understood, programs can be implemented to reduce and maybe even eliminate the cycle of violence. While most research covers children who were actually abused themselves and the implications of that abuse, this study will look at the effects that exposure to domestic violence has. The researcher wants to look at how seeing the violence, while not actually being the victim of violence, affects that child as they grow up and have their own relationships. Interviews with perpetrators of domestic violence would be beneficial to studying dome
The topic of domestic violence and its effects on children has been covered numerous times in numerous ways. Studying domestic violence and the impacts the violence has on a child's life is very important. A positive correlation in the research may have Social and/or Family Services changing some of their practices. While much of the literature on this topic looks at children as victims of abuse, this research will look at the effect that witnessing interparental violence has on a person throughout their lifetime. The exposure to domestic violence will have taken place between the ages of two and seventeen. If a positive correlation is found, programs can be implemented at different levels that can deter that child from living with abuse, either as the abuser or as the victim, in their adult life. The hypothesis that abused children grow up to be either an abuser or abused is widely accepted. In order to study this, I will survey and interview 40 inmates at the Florence Prison Complex in Florence, AZ, to see the amount and extent of violence they witnessed as a child. The researcher will hypothesize that the association between exposure to domestic violence and the child becoming an adult abuser to be a positive relationship. For the respondents that have been exposed, another survey will then be given, measuring the types and amounts of exposure. When law enforcement officials are involved in cases of domestic violence, the child is overlooked many times. ) To collect data, 40 respondents will be surveyed. This may also implement practices in the social services departments that will take a child out of the home not only because they are victims, but because they are witnessing violence, thus increasing their risk of becoming an abuse later in life. This research will hopefully help the law enforcement officials to see the effects that witnessing abuse has on a child and can take steps to either remove children from homes or offer counseling sessions.
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