Beating the Devil Out of Them

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A01=Denise Donnelly
A01=Murray Straus
A01=Valerie Bentz
aggression risk factors
American Psychiatric Association
Antisocial Behavior
Author_Denise Donnelly
Author_Murray Straus
Author_Valerie Bentz
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston Children’s Hospital
Category=JHB
child maltreatment
corporal
Corporal Punishment
Corporal Punishment Parents
Cultural Spillover Theory
Delinquency
Denise A. Donnelly
developmental psychology
disciplinary practices
Ending Corporal Punishment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experience Corporal Punishment
family
Good Hard Spanking
Harmful Side Effect
High Economic Achievement
juvenile delinquency research
Legal Corporal Punishment
Masochistic Sex
Minority Group Parents
Murray A. Straus
national
National Committee
National Family Violence Survey
Nationally Representative Samples
Non-abusive Parents
Parent Education Programs
Parental Advice Books
Parents Spank
physical discipline effects on children
Potential Lethal Consequences
punishment
SES Index
Social Science Research
socialization outcomes
survey
violence

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138519251
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on his studies of over 9,000 families, Murray A. Straus, the foremost researcher on family violence in the world, discusses the extent to which parents in the United States use corporal punishment (such as spanking and slapping) and its effects on their chil-dren. The question of whether corporal punishment is an effective method of discipline is hotly debated. Straus contends that this believed-to-be-"minor" form of physical violence is precursor to much violence that plagues our world.

Children who are spanked quickly learn that love and violence can go hand in hand. Since spanking is generally done by loving, caring parents for the child's own good a child can learn that hitting is "morally right." Straus describes what he has learned through two decades of research: children who are spanked are from two to six times more likely to be physically aggressive, to become juvenile delinquents, and later, as adults, to use physical violence against their spouses, to have sadomasochistic tendencies, and to suffer from depression. Straus alerts parents to these risks, and argues that spanking adversely affects not only the children who are subjected to it but society as a whole.

This groundbreaking book, now available in paperback with a substantive new introduction and new concluding chapter, is essential reading for parents as well as teachers, lawyers, and judges. Professionals in fields such as social work, child protection, delin-quency and criminology, psychology, and politics will find it of critical importance.

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