000 03213nab a22003497a 4500
999 _c4100
_d4100
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008 130417s2013 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
022 _a2253-3222
040 _aFVC
100 _aMurphy, Clare
_91780
245 _aUnderstanding connections and relationships :
_bchild maltreatment, intimate partner violence and parenting
_cClare Murphy, Nicola Paton, Pauline Gulliver and Janet Fanslow
260 _aAuckland, N.Z.:
_bNew Zealand Family Violence Clearinghouse,
_c2013
300 _aelectronic document (38 p.); PDFfile: 392 KB; Word DOC file; 570 KB
500 _aNZFVC Issues Paper 3, April 2013
500 _aRecommended reading
520 _aThis Issues Paper reviews the evidence on the frequency with which intimate partner violence and child maltreatment co-occur. The United States NatSCEV study showed: • 34% of the children who had witnessed intimate partner violence had also been subjected to direct maltreatment in the past year, compared to 9% of those who had not witnessed intimate partner violence. • Over their lifetimes, over half of those (57%) who had witnessed intimate partner violence were also maltreated, compared to 11% of those who had not witnessed intimate partner violence. • Men were more likely to perpetrate intimate partner violence incidents that were witnessed by children than were women, with 68% of children witnessing violence only by men. Exposure to violence can have ongoing negative impacts on children and young people’s health, education, social and economic wellbeing. Recommendations from this paper include the need for greater recognition of: • The links between child maltreatment and intimate partner violence • The detrimental effects of children’s exposure to intimate partner violence • The disruption to mother-child relationships due to intimate partner violence • The poor fathering that can accompany perpetration of intimate partner violence This needs to translate to greater understanding of the importance of supporting children’s relationships with the non-abusive parent. This work needs to include creating conditions of safety, and may need to include active work to help restore relationships between non-abusive parents and their children. Work to address poor fathering is also necessary. NZFVC Issues Paper 4, Policy and practice implications: Child maltreatment, intimate partner violence and parenting, explores the system responses required to support children exposed to intimate partner violence.
650 2 7 _9103
_aCHILD ABUSE
650 2 7 _aRECOMMENDED READING
_96431
650 2 7 _aCHILD EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE
_9130
650 2 7 _aCHILDREN
_9127
650 2 7 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
650 2 7 _aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
_9431
650 2 7 _aPREVALENCE
_9457
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _92705
_aGulliver, Pauline
700 _aPaton, Nicola
_93083
700 _91129
_aFanslow, Janet L.
773 0 _tIssues Paper 3, April 2013
830 _94955
_aNZFVC Issues Paper
856 _uhttps://www.vine.org.nz/issues-papers/understanding-connections-and-relationships-child-maltreatment-intimate-partner-violence-and-parenting
942 _cBRIEFING
_2ddc