Domestic Violence: A Global View
By (Author) Randal W. Summers
Edited by Allan M. Hoffman
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th December 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
362.8292
Hardback
216
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
539g
Compares and contrasts the ways in which domestic abuse is viewed and handled among thirteen different countries from around the world. Historically, in most cultures, domestic violence has been an accepted fact of life. Only in recent years has it begun to be viewed as a criminal problem, and in many societies, it is still culturally acceptable. This informative reference resource allows students to compare and contrast the ways in which domestic abuse is viewed and handled among thirteen different representative countries from around the world. Students are encouraged to think critically to determine which cultures have been the most successful in dealing with domestic abuse and which prevailing techniques have been shared around the world to try to eliminate this very serious problem. The countries chosen represent vastly different geographic regions and cultures. Each chapter describes how domestic violence is perceived in a particular country and follows with information on the incidence or extent of the problem in that country, as well as specific programs and approaches that have been taken to prevent and control it. This international perspective encourages students to recognize the problem as a global one, providing greater insight into the ways in which we can address it and find solutions to prevent it world wide.
Randal Summers is an adjunct professor in the Business Administration Program at the University of Phoenix, Southern California Campus. He is the author of Teen Violence: A Global View (Greenwood, 2000). Allan Hoffman is dean and professor of the College of Health Sciences at Des Moines University. He is the author of Schools, Violence and Society (Praeger, 1996) and Teen Violence: A Global View (Greenwood, 2000).