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Except that there is a causative link between people believing abuse is acceptable, and them abusing.But its not the cause of the problem. You have not shown that and we can say its a correlation just like you claims family setup was.
Look at Carl Emerson's post just above. He believes caning young folk is acceptable; he would be willing to see it done. There we see the way attitudes cause behaviour.
When you boil it right down, yes there is. And that's the willingness of adults to abuse. Without that; no abuse.There is no one single cause to child abuse.
I've asked you for evidence of this, and you haven't supplied any. Barring something like pretty extreme psychosis, which is nowhere near as prevalent as physical abuse of children, I don't believe this at all.Like I said people can believe abuse is wrong and still abuse.
Those risk factors might affect the situations in which people who fundamentally believe abuse is acceptable, actually do abuse. But they don't cause the abuse. Abuse is chosen behaviour. It's not something that "just happens" when the circumstances arise.Why do you think they talk about the Risk and Protective factors of child abuse. Why some situations are more conducive for abuse. Why do you think within those risk factor categories there are certain people. Its certainly not because of their beliefs about abuse.
Just as, to create an analogy, there might be particular situations in which someone is more likely to drink to excess, but those situations don't cause the drinking. It's the choice of the person to drink.
It makes sense to me that people who've been abused might have normalised that abuse in their own minds. As for the rest, see above; the situation might make them more likely to act on that belief, but the situation doesn't cause the behaviour.Thats unless you want to say that those people who happen to have coexisting issues like being abused themselves, being single mothers, being non biological partners just happen to be the same groups that believe abuse is ok. But then why is it that those who happen to believe abuse is ok also happen to have all these coexisting risk factors.
And the groups assessed as low risk, they're just ignored? That approach, the way you want to do it, would see abuse in "traditional" families fly completely under the radar.Yes and determining whether parents can parent in non abusive ways is determining the Risk and Protective factors and then targeting those groups with support
Really? What, so you help an abusive single parent find a partner, without addressing any other issues, and you reckon that prevents further abuse? That's a successful intervention?Yes it will. Its even used as a measure and approach in present child abuse intervention supports.
I don't believe that for one second. Nor do I believe that child abuse intervention includes matchmaking for single parents.
If healthy or abusive parenting can happen in any family structure, then it's not about the family structure. As I said upthread, at best that becomes a population-level statistical indicator of some other possible factors in play. Which is pretty meaningless in individual cases.Yes thats true but it is about family structure as well.
But they don't even consistently measure what you're referring to as a "traditional" family, which is what I was pointing out.No that is one of the strengths of the studies is that it consistently shows certain family structure have much higher risk.
For the umpteenth time, correlation is not causation... until you demonstrate that you actually understand that, we're probably going to keep going in circles on this.The more factors that point to risk of child abuse the stronger the link for it being an important causal factor.
Of course there is. But claiming that there isn't would get you off the hook for demonstrating it with the things you want to claim.There is no clear way to show a definite causal connection with any single factor including parents attitudes and beliefs.
No, we can do much better than that. We do it with other forms of abuse, why would we refuse to do it for this one?The best that can be done is to assess the Risk and Protective factors.
All you are doing here is demonstrating that actually, it's not about singleness at all. That singleness correlates with other factors which may contribute to someone's choices. But singleness isn't what causes someone to abuse.For example single parents are more likely to be poor and poverty is associated with hightened risk of abuse. Single parenthood is associated with higher rates of psychological stress which is also associated with higher risks. Single parents who have experienced childhood abuse have a hieghtened risk of child abuse and there are several other indepenent evidence of hightened risk and single parents. Adding these together gives more strength to this being a cause of child abuse.
Higher prevalence, yes. But it's not the cause. Those are two different things.Altogether this builds the evdience that certain family structures can have a higher risk of causing child abuse.
What I just said is exactly why. It's a population-level statistical indicator of potential abuse, and therefore it makes sense for government agencies with limited resources to direct those resources accordingly. But what I don't see, in the literature around intervention and prevention programmes, from the government or private organisations, is any mention of trying to get single parents partnered up to reduce their risk of abusing; at most it's one thing taken into account when assessing what supports a household has.So why would Government agencies, Justice and Family Wellbeing advocates and support organisations include these measures if they were irrelevant to preventing child abuse.
And being a statistical indicator is not the same as being the cause of abuse. And when it comes to prevention, it's really important not to overlook abuse that happens in all household types, including the ones that don't meet the statistical stereotype.
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