Drawing on international research and practice, this fully updated new edition of Domestic and Family Violence: A Critical Introduction to Knowledge and Practice examines current debates and research evidence around domestic and family violence, including sexual violence, non-fatal strangulation, and coercive control and explores current legislative reforms.
Taking an intersectional perspective, it addresses the deepening gender debate surrounding Domestic and Family Violence and evolving construct of masculinity, new LGBTIQA+ research, and adolescent violence. It also examines victim challenges - including new research on male victimisation - support requirements, and implications for holistic service responses.
Domestic and Family Violence provides a necessary update and will be an important resource to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, and social work engaged in studies of domestic and family violence.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-032-94601-6 (9781032946016)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Silke Meyer is a Professor of Social Work at Griffith University and an Adjunct Professor in Criminology at the Monash Gender and Family Violence Prevention Centre, Australia. Silke is a criminologist and social worker by training, bringing practical and theoretical expertise to her research, teaching and writing. She is an internationally recognised expert in the impact of domestic and family violence on child and adult victim-survivors, victim-survivor help-seeking experiences and service system responses, men's behaviour change programs along with domestic and family violence-related policy and law reform. Silke regularly develops and delivers training to promote domestic and family violence-informed practice across child protection, policing, court and healthcare responses.
Andrew Frost is an Adjunct Senior Academic at CQUniversity Australia and at Ara Institute of Canterbury in Aotearoa New Zealand. Andrew has worked professionally, taught, and researched in offender rehabilitation for more than 30 years. His practice and award-winning research into groupwork with violent offenders, along with the establishment of a forensic therapeutic community, has spawned a range of publications across books and academic journals. Practice models and other outputs of this work have been used by state, NGO, and independent service providers to inform practice.
Autor*in
University of Innsbruck, Austria
1.Introduction. 2.The nature and prevalence of domestic and family violence. 3.Theoretical strands. 4.Enacting violence in the context of intimate and family relationships: Understanding perpetratorhood. 5.Experiencing violence in the context of intimate and family relationships: Understanding victimhood. 6.The burden on children. 7.Not just a heterosexual, intimate relationship problem. 8.The vulnerability of the displaced and the dispossessed: Promoting culturally informed and safe service system responses. 9.Tackling domestic and family violence: Primary, secondary and tertiary prevention. 10.Responding to domestic and family violence: Good practices. 11.Conclusion. 12.List of Acronyms.