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Does grooming facilitate the development of Stockholm syndrome? : Shirley J. Jülich and Eileen B. Oak the social work practice implications

By: Jülich, Shirley J.
Contributor(s): [Oak, Eileen B. ].
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work.Publisher: Aotearoa New Zealand Association of Social Workers 2016Subject(s): CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE | DISCLOSURE | RISK ASSESSMENT | SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Click here to access online In: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2016, 28(3): 4-14 (Open access)Summary: "This article focuses on the problem of risk instrumentalism in social work and the way it can erode the relationship-based nature of practice and with it, the kinds of critical reflexivity required for remedial interventions to keep children safe. METHOD: By exploring the relationship between the process of grooming and the condition known as Stockholm syndrome, the article seeks to address this problem by offering some concepts to inform a critical understanding of case dynamics in the sexual abuse of children which can explain the reluctance of victim-survivors to disclose." (From the abstract). Record #5248
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Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2016, 28(3): 4-14. Open access.

"This article focuses on the problem of risk instrumentalism in social work and the way it can erode the relationship-based nature of practice and with it, the kinds of critical reflexivity required for remedial interventions to keep children safe.

METHOD: By exploring the relationship between the process of grooming and the condition known as Stockholm syndrome, the article seeks to address this problem by offering some concepts to inform a critical understanding of case dynamics in the sexual abuse of children which can explain the reluctance of victim-survivors to disclose." (From the abstract). Record #5248