000 03024nab a22003857a 4500
999 _c4101
_d4101
005 20250625151330.0
008 130417s2013 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
022 _a2253-3214 (print); 2253-3222 (online)
040 _aFVC
100 _aMurphy, Clare
_91780
245 _aPolicy and practice implications :
_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 (35 p.); PDFfile: 392 KB; Word DOC file; 570 KB
500 _aNZFVC Issues Paper 4, April 2013
500 _aRecommended reading
520 _aThis paper explores the system responses required to support children exposed to intimate partner violence. Guiding principles for protecting children and adults exposed to child maltreatment and intimate partner violence include: • Provide holistic support for children • Support the non-abusing parent • Support the mother-child relationship • Hold the perpetrator accountable • Be culturally responsive Children’s safety and wellbeing is highly dependent on the quality of their bond with their non-abusive parent (most often the mother). Programmes to support mothers and children need to include a focus on supporting them to strengthen or re-establish their relationship, which may have been damaged by exposure to violence. Parenting programmes for fathers who have used violence need to emphasise the need to end violence against their children’s mothers (they cannot be “a lousy partner but a good dad”). There needs to be adequately resourced services to support children, adult victim/survivors and perpetrators. These services need to work in co-ordinated and collaborative ways, as part of multi-agency response systems, and work from a sophisticated understanding of intimate partner violence. The United States Centers for Disease Control have identified safe, stable, and nurturing relationships as fundamental in supporting children to thrive. Exposure to intimate partner violence and the impact of violence on the parenting children receive need to become key areas of work in responding to ‘vulnerable children'.
650 2 7 _9103
_aCHILD ABUSE
650 2 7 _aDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
_9203
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 _aINTERVENTION
_9326
650 2 7 _9431
_aINTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
650 2 7 _aPARENTING
_9429
650 2 7 _aPOLICY
_9447
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
700 _92705
_aGulliver, Pauline
700 _aPaton, Nicola
_93083
700 _91129
_aFanslow, Janet L.
773 0 _tIssues Paper 4, April 2013
830 _94955
_aNZFVC Issues Paper
856 _uhttps://www.vine.org.nz/issues-papers/policy-and-practice-implications-child-maltreatment-intimate-partner-violence-and-parenting
942 _cBRIEFING
_2ddc