Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse

Statement of problem: The rate at which children are maltreated is one of the most sensitive measures of demographic, social, and economic conditions. Maltreatment may differ markedly in terms of an area’s socio-demographic and economic makeup and this phenomenon needs to be studied in a structural...

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Main Authors: Iovu Mihai-Bogdan, Roth Maria
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2010-07-01
Series:Social Change Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/scr-2016-0005
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spelling doaj-dc67ba6f23ae4219b0a95cb1d181adc12021-09-05T14:00:27ZengSciendoSocial Change Review2068-80162010-07-018153110.1515/scr-2016-0005Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child AbuseIovu Mihai-Bogdan0Roth Maria1Babes-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca, Department of Social Work,128 21 Decembrie 1989 Bld., 400604 Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaBabes-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca, Department of Social Work,128 21 Decembrie 1989 Bld., 400604 Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaStatement of problem: The rate at which children are maltreated is one of the most sensitive measures of demographic, social, and economic conditions. Maltreatment may differ markedly in terms of an area’s socio-demographic and economic makeup and this phenomenon needs to be studied in a structural context. This study employs a social disorganization perspective to identify the most reliable structural factors of child maltreatment for children aged 10 to 18 years in Valcea County. Method: ICAST-CH, an instrument developed by the International Society for Prevention Child Abuse and Neglect in order to assess child maltreatment’s rates in a unitary way in different countries. It was applied to 1142 children in Valcea’s urban areas. Results: child abuse is positive correlated to high rates of community violence and negative correlated with community resources. The parents’ education and occupation status is involved in explaining high rates of child abuse in different manners. Conclusion: the urban areas are diverse spaces in terms of variables that influence child abuse. Future studies in the subject of structural child abuse would need to be done in more urban areas in order to find some additional patterns of the phenomenon.https://doi.org/10.1515/scr-2016-0005child abuseneglecturban areassocial disorganisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iovu Mihai-Bogdan
Roth Maria
spellingShingle Iovu Mihai-Bogdan
Roth Maria
Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
Social Change Review
child abuse
neglect
urban areas
social disorganisation
author_facet Iovu Mihai-Bogdan
Roth Maria
author_sort Iovu Mihai-Bogdan
title Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
title_short Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
title_full Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
title_fullStr Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
title_full_unstemmed Urban Communities as a Social Space for Child Abuse
title_sort urban communities as a social space for child abuse
publisher Sciendo
series Social Change Review
issn 2068-8016
publishDate 2010-07-01
description Statement of problem: The rate at which children are maltreated is one of the most sensitive measures of demographic, social, and economic conditions. Maltreatment may differ markedly in terms of an area’s socio-demographic and economic makeup and this phenomenon needs to be studied in a structural context. This study employs a social disorganization perspective to identify the most reliable structural factors of child maltreatment for children aged 10 to 18 years in Valcea County. Method: ICAST-CH, an instrument developed by the International Society for Prevention Child Abuse and Neglect in order to assess child maltreatment’s rates in a unitary way in different countries. It was applied to 1142 children in Valcea’s urban areas. Results: child abuse is positive correlated to high rates of community violence and negative correlated with community resources. The parents’ education and occupation status is involved in explaining high rates of child abuse in different manners. Conclusion: the urban areas are diverse spaces in terms of variables that influence child abuse. Future studies in the subject of structural child abuse would need to be done in more urban areas in order to find some additional patterns of the phenomenon.
topic child abuse
neglect
urban areas
social disorganisation
url https://doi.org/10.1515/scr-2016-0005
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AT rothmaria urbancommunitiesasasocialspaceforchildabuse
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