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Mandatory reporting laws and the identification of severe child abuse and neglect / edited by Ben Mathews, Donald C. Bross.

Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Child Maltreatment, Contemporary Issues in Research and Policy ; 4Editor: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Springer, 2015Descripción: xxv, 564 páginas : 17 ilustracionesTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9789401796859
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • HN25
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Introduction -- Outlining the nature of the book, and the background to the main concerns in the book – Donald C. Bross -- Part 1 -- 1 Mandatory reporting laws: their origin, nature and development over time – Ben Mathews -- 2 Who is maltreated and how mandated reporting might help - Desmond K Runyan -- 3 Competing values and evidence: How do we evaluate mandated reporting and CPS response? - Brett Drake and Melissa Jonson-Reid -- 4 An inter-reporter analysis of mandated child maltreatment reporting in the USA - John E. Kesner and Bridget V. Dever -- 5 Privacy and legal duties to warn about unsafe behavior, conditions, or hazards: The example of child abuse and neglect reporting – Donald C. Bross -- 6 The historical background for mandatory reporting laws in public health – Edward Richards -- Part 2 -- 7 A theoretical framework for designing and evaluating strategies to identify cases of serious child abuse and neglect – Ben Mathews -- 8 Ethics and the identification and response to child abuse and neglect - Jacqueline J. Glover, Ph.D. and Lisa M. Justis, LCSW, CTS -- 9 Medical perspectives: bioethics/ethics and the duties of medical professionals, and the nature, advantages and limits of public health approaches – Donald Woodhouse -- 10 Economic issues in the community response to child maltreatment – Leonie Segal -- Part 3 -- 11 Neglect: Should there be mandatory reporting? – Edward Goldson -- 12 Mandatory reporting and the difficulties identifying and responding to risk of severe neglect: A response requiring a rethink – Bob Lone -- 13 The sins of the (Irish) fathers: Is mandatory reporting the best response? – Helen Buckley -- 14 Mandatory reporting of child sexual abuse by religious leaders – Patrick Parkinson -- Part 3 -- 15 Practical issues and challenges for physicians reporting suspected child maltreatment – Emalee Flaherty -- 16 Training in reporting of child maltreatment: Where we are and where we need to go – Maureen C. Kenny -- 17 An evidence-supported approach to reporting child maltreatment - Brad Donohue, Krisann Alvarez, Kimberly N. Schubert -- 18 Mandatory reporting of child abuse and neglect by health professionals - Debbie Scott and Jennifer Fraser -- 19 The social construction of disclosure: The case of child abuse in Israeli society - Zvi Eisikovits, Jonathan Davidov, Laura Sigad, Rachel Lev-Wiesel -- Part 4 -- 20 What will happen to this child if I report? Outcomes of reporting child maltreatment - Theodore P. Cross, Betsy Goulet, Jesse J. Helton, Emily Lux, and Tamara Fuller -- 21 Rethinking the functioning of child protective services - John D. Fluke and Katherine Casillas -- 22 The role of mandatory reporting in preventative child welfare reforms: An uneasy fit? - Leah Bromfield -- 23 Mandatory reporting of child abuse and marginalised families - Heather Douglas and Tamara Walsh -- Part 5 -- 24 The identification and reporting of severe violence against children: International standards and practices – Jaap E. Doek -- 25 Legislation concerning reporting of child sexual abuse and child trafficking in India: A closer look – Sibnath Deb.
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Springer eBooks

Introduction -- Outlining the nature of the book, and the background to the main concerns in the book – Donald C. Bross -- Part 1 -- 1 Mandatory reporting laws: their origin, nature and development over time – Ben Mathews -- 2 Who is maltreated and how mandated reporting might help - Desmond K Runyan -- 3 Competing values and evidence: How do we evaluate mandated reporting and CPS response? - Brett Drake and Melissa Jonson-Reid -- 4 An inter-reporter analysis of mandated child maltreatment reporting in the USA - John E. Kesner and Bridget V. Dever -- 5 Privacy and legal duties to warn about unsafe behavior, conditions, or hazards: The example of child abuse and neglect reporting – Donald C. Bross -- 6 The historical background for mandatory reporting laws in public health – Edward Richards -- Part 2 -- 7 A theoretical framework for designing and evaluating strategies to identify cases of serious child abuse and neglect – Ben Mathews -- 8 Ethics and the identification and response to child abuse and neglect - Jacqueline J. Glover, Ph.D. and Lisa M. Justis, LCSW, CTS -- 9 Medical perspectives: bioethics/ethics and the duties of medical professionals, and the nature, advantages and limits of public health approaches – Donald Woodhouse -- 10 Economic issues in the community response to child maltreatment – Leonie Segal -- Part 3 -- 11 Neglect: Should there be mandatory reporting? – Edward Goldson -- 12 Mandatory reporting and the difficulties identifying and responding to risk of severe neglect: A response requiring a rethink – Bob Lone -- 13 The sins of the (Irish) fathers: Is mandatory reporting the best response? – Helen Buckley -- 14 Mandatory reporting of child sexual abuse by religious leaders – Patrick Parkinson -- Part 3 -- 15 Practical issues and challenges for physicians reporting suspected child maltreatment – Emalee Flaherty -- 16 Training in reporting of child maltreatment: Where we are and where we need to go – Maureen C. Kenny -- 17 An evidence-supported approach to reporting child maltreatment - Brad Donohue, Krisann Alvarez, Kimberly N. Schubert -- 18 Mandatory reporting of child abuse and neglect by health professionals - Debbie Scott and Jennifer Fraser -- 19 The social construction of disclosure: The case of child abuse in Israeli society - Zvi Eisikovits, Jonathan Davidov, Laura Sigad, Rachel Lev-Wiesel -- Part 4 -- 20 What will happen to this child if I report? Outcomes of reporting child maltreatment - Theodore P. Cross, Betsy Goulet, Jesse J. Helton, Emily Lux, and Tamara Fuller -- 21 Rethinking the functioning of child protective services - John D. Fluke and Katherine Casillas -- 22 The role of mandatory reporting in preventative child welfare reforms: An uneasy fit? - Leah Bromfield -- 23 Mandatory reporting of child abuse and marginalised families - Heather Douglas and Tamara Walsh -- Part 5 -- 24 The identification and reporting of severe violence against children: International standards and practices – Jaap E. Doek -- 25 Legislation concerning reporting of child sexual abuse and child trafficking in India: A closer look – Sibnath Deb.

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