2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2010.04.034
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Child-to-parent violence: Profile of abusive adolescents and their families

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Cited by 103 publications
(108 citation statements)
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“…These findings accord with the majority of child-to-parent abuse research [3,7,8,9,13]. However, it remains debatable whether these gender differences are attributed to cultural reasons or methodological limitations.…”
Section: Part I: Exploratory Analysis Of Adult and Adolescent Perpetrsupporting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These findings accord with the majority of child-to-parent abuse research [3,7,8,9,13]. However, it remains debatable whether these gender differences are attributed to cultural reasons or methodological limitations.…”
Section: Part I: Exploratory Analysis Of Adult and Adolescent Perpetrsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…The majority of research indicates that males are more likely to offend against their parents than females [9]. In a preliminary study, Cornell and Gelles [7] noted that sons used more violence towards their parents than daughters.…”
Section: Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, no weapons were reportedly used by the clinicreferred sample (Nock & Kazdin, 2002). Among the incarcerated sample, about 67% committed both physical and verbal aggression; 29% committed only physical abuse, and 4% verbal abuse toward their parents (Ibabe & Jaureguizar, 2010). Therefore, the type of sample one investigates may affect the incidence of parent aggression, with higher incidences among forensic sample.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mothers have a higher tendency to be victimized by their children as compared to fathers (Walsh & Krienert, 2007). Based on public prosecution files of 413 juveniles in Spain, 97% of the juveniles had victimized their mother (Ibabe & Jaureguizar, 2010). Furthermore, a study that examined 438 family violence cases from court records showed that 85% of the abused victims were parents and about 64% of them were mothers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar comparative design by Kennedy et al (2010) found young offenders who were violent towards parents showed greater psychological disturbance and greater association with gang members than those who were not. Outside of the US, Ibabe and Jaureguizar (2010) examined the case files and judicial proceedings of seventy adolescents in Bilbao, Spain, who had committed violent offences against parents (half of whom had also committed other types of offences) and compared them with a sample of thirty-three adolescents who only committed non-familial offences. Their results suggested that the 'parent abuse only' sample constitute a unique group sharing a particular psychosocial profile.…”
Section: Researching Parent Abusementioning
confidence: 99%