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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides an overview of the issue of child homicide and the need for separate research into the issue of child homicide in Canada. This paper introduces a broad view and then looks specifically at the issue in Manitoba, Canada. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHchihomca.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Frequently, child homicides are linked to family violence issues, including interpersonal violence that results in the death of mothers. In the United States, for example, child homicide rates have
been studied in conjunction to the death of pregnant and postpartum women by domestic partners (Chang et al., 2005). Statistical assessments of family violence by spouses suggest that families
in which violence occurs regularly are more likely to produce injuries that can be life threatening to female spouses and their children (Mihorean, 2005). Though there are many studies that
have been conducted in the last decade about the nature of family violence, the issues impacting women and the correlated violence against children, child homicide has been a less distinctly
studied issue. One of the problems in grouping child homicide with family violence, particularly violence against women, is that child homicide can be the product of a mothers actions
just as often as it can be the product of a fathers. Growing attention to the issue of infanticide in the current literature and the exploration of the connection
between child homicide and parental mental illness suggest the need to consider child homicide as a distinct issue with a distinct social context. In a study by Bourget,
Grace and Whitehurst conducted through the University of Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, researchers separated filicide, or the murder of a child by a mother or father, from other forms
of family violence, defining it as a separate issue, one that has very specific characteristics and may have separate causative factors. The linking of filicide to the homicide
of mothers by fathers or domestic partners suggests a similarity that does not exist. These researchers maintain that filicide most commonly occurs in conjunction with pre-existing psychiatric conditions, including
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