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Children as Victims
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Children as Victims

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Interprofessional working

April 2008 | 192 pages | Learning Matters
This book highlights the problems, dilemmas and challenges facing the child protection agencies in England and Wales and tackles a variety of areas where knowledge on child abuse is either limited or out-of-date. Raising awareness of social, demographic, situational and environmental risk factors that may lead to the harming of children, it also looks at difficult cultural issues that sometimes get in the way of protecting children. Any professional working in, or studying, child protection will find this book an essential read.
 
Constructing childhood and child abuse
 
The wrong kind of victim? Children, young people and street crime
 
Parental use of alcohol and illicit drugs: A critical review of recent research
 
Making sense of sex offender abuse and the internet
 
Children as victims of crime
 
Child abuse in the religious context-the abuse of trust
 
Learning from mistakes –understanding police failure in child protection
 
Talking with children: constructing victim-hood or agency?
 
Child protection from a diverse inner-city primary school perspective
 
Minimising the risk to children and young people- the police response
 
Statutory social work processes involving children: prostitution and other areas of vulnerability
 
Concluding themes

An interesting book which is relevant to those who are working with children & young people. This book challenges views and notions of childhood and considers the impact of negative experiences on children.

Mrs Annie Ostapenko-Denton
Community Studies, Truro College
March 13, 2012