2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10896-015-9786-7
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Edleson Revisited: Reviewing Children’s Witnessing of Domestic Violence 15 Years Later

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Cited by 73 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…In the UK, Australia and North America, child protection social work has increased its capacity to identify DVA and its impact on children (Kimball, 2016). In England and Wales, DVA was the factor most frequently identified by children in need assessments in 2016 with DVA being identified in 49.6% of all such assessments (DfE 2016).…”
Section: Identifying the Key Components Of A 'Whole Family' Interventmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the UK, Australia and North America, child protection social work has increased its capacity to identify DVA and its impact on children (Kimball, 2016). In England and Wales, DVA was the factor most frequently identified by children in need assessments in 2016 with DVA being identified in 49.6% of all such assessments (DfE 2016).…”
Section: Identifying the Key Components Of A 'Whole Family' Interventmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a recent review article, Kimble (2016) examined 15 years of research on how children experienced family violence and abuse. One response shown in some of the literature is a higher likelihood of children becoming violent, although in this study that happens in only a small minority of cases.…”
Section: How Are the Children Doing?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the well-documented negative effects (Holt et al, 2008), a good number of studies indicate that not all children are negatively affected and that some IPV-exposed children and youth retain healthy functioning or develop positive adaptation and are able to follow normal trajectories of human development (Edleson, 1999;Graham-Bermann et al, 2009;Herman-Smith, 2013;Holt et al, 2008;Kimball, 2016;Laing, Humphreys, & Cavanagh, 2013;Margolin, 2005;Stith et al, 2000). For example, in a recent extensive review of the literature, Laing and colleagues (Laing et al, 2013) found that 26% to 50% of IPV-exposed children were functioning as well as those who were not exposed.…”
Section: Summary Of Resilience Research and Ipv Exposurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…With consistently high rates of child exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) being reported, investigated, and substantiated (Fallon et al, 2015;Sinha, 2010) and heightened risks for harmful effects (Holt, Buckley, & Whelan, 2008;Kimball, 2016;Wolfe, Crooks, Lee, McIntyre-Smith, & Jaffe, 2003), it is timely to propose a resilience-informed lens for working with this vulnerable population. This article summarizes the growing research literature on resilience and IPV-exposed children, offers a working definition of resilience and discussion of related concepts to IPV-exposed children, and provides two case examples to explore ways of understanding and fostering resilience with children and youth exposed to IPV.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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