In the Public Interest by Child Abuse Survivors and their Advocates in their Pursuit of Justice, Recognition, Recovery and Redress.
<< First < Previous Current Page "478" Next > Last >>
Article Category: 2006 December
Description:
Article originally prepared on : 06 December 2006
The scandals rocking the Roman Catholic Church have brought new awareness to the issue of child and adolescent sexual abuse. Across the country, child advocates, prosecutors, police and medical experts say the intense spotlight will likely speed along a growing movement to treat all young victims of abuse with more sensitivity. They also say they expect that more victims may feel comfortable coming forward - and that now is the time to improve the ways young victims are treated.
Child advocates say the treatment of victims varies greatly state by state, according to the laws in place, and community by community, according to the people charged with protecting children and how well they coordinate with each other. "Our concern is that child victims are being lost in the process," said Anne Lynn, project director of the Northeast Regional Children's Advocacy Center at Philadelphia Children's Alliance. Most efforts are focused on getting doctors, child advocates, prosecutors, police, psychologists, and clergy to create a community response that makes sense from the victim's point of view.
Child advocates, police, prosecutors, doctors and clergy in every town can talk about what they've learned from the Catholic Church scandals and how they are changing the way they investigate sexual abuse crimes and care for young victims.
Why it matters
The societal costs of child sexual abuse are immense. Studies show that child sexual abuse can lead to criminal behavior in adulthood, depression, drug and alcohol abuse, high-risk sex, spousal abuse and eating disorders. Better treatment of children and adolescents who have been sexually abused and more effective preventative measures could reduce the financial and societal costs to communities.
Skip to sources in your region
Background
• Allison Turkel, senior attorney with the National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse, which is part of the American Prosecutors Research Institute in Alexandria, Va.. She cites several ways that the Catholic Church's problems may affect all child sexual abuse cases: It might help the overall jury pool if more people are informed about the issue. If the public can believe that priests can abuse children, they may be more likely to believe that fathers or grandfathers or other trusted adults can, also, she said. Judges might be more likely to allow subpoenas and search warrants to be served on the Catholic Church or other institutions. It could draw clergy into being better advocates for children in their communities. She cautions, however, that the Catholic Church cases are not typical; most cases of child sexual abuse occur in the home. Ms. Turkel is featured on a webcast about handling child abuse cases. Contact 703-549 4253.
• Information on the societal costs of child abuse.
• The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates that more than 100,000 children were sexually abused in 1998.
• Statistics on the impact of sexual abuse on children are available on Dr. Nancy Faulkner's web site.
State by state
• The National Children's Alliance lists hundreds of member organizations in 49 states across the country.
• The National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect Information offers a state-by-state look at child abuse statutes. It also offers contact information for state chapters of Prevent Child Abuse America.
• The National Association of Child Advocates lists member organizations in nearly every state.
• The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children, a group of social workers, psychologists, attorneys, physicians, nurses, researchers, law enforcement officers, and protective services administrators. The group's aim is to make sure everyone affected by child abuse and maltreatment receives the best possible professional help. State chapters are listed here.
In the Midwest
• Bernardine Dohrn, director of the Children and Family Justice Center at Northwestern University, specializes in children's rights and the law and juvenile justice and welfare, 312-503-0135, b-dohrn@northwestern.edu.
• Julie Pape, project director for the Midwest Regional Children's Advocacy Center. As part of the National Children's Alliance, this office encourages a multi-agency approach to prevention, investigation and treatment of child victims of sexual abuse throughout the Northeastern United States, 888-422-2955, MRCAC@childrenshc.org.
• Michigan Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, 517-347-7000.
• Minnesota Center Against Violence and Abuse.
• Interfaith Sexual Trauma Institute in Minnesota.
If you wish to keep this article alive in the Internet Archive simply click the link below.
Click here to add this page to the Internet Archive
<< First < Previous Current Page "478" Next > Last >>
Select from these TFYQA archives
Contact us if you have data you want to preserve.
Tell others, share this page on : X | BlueSky | Mastodon.Social | Strangeminds.Social | Facebook
Find us on X.com || New ID on Facebook || BlueSky || Mastodon.Social || Strangeminds.Social
trauma informed human rights justice failed institutions UN Convention on Human Rights Rights of the Child and a Bill of Rights for Australia future evidence resilience not providing or representing a secular Australia autodidact
Hegemony: The authority, dominance, and influence of one group, nation, or society over another group, nation, or society; typically through cultural, economic, or political means.
.
If you found this information to be of assistance please don't forget to donate so that we can extend these resources to more survivors. These pages are focused on preserving survivor relevant information. Information is not provided as legal or professional advice; it is provided as general information only and requires that you validate any information via your own legal or other professional service providers.
You can directly support my work at here