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Understanding Agency and Resistance Strategies (UNARS) : children's experiences of domestic violence Jane E. M. Callaghan and Joanne H. Alexander

By: Callaghan, Jane E. M.
Contributor(s): Alexander, Joanne H.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Northampton, UK : University of Northampton, 2015Description: electronic document (272 pages); PDF file: 4.12 MB.Subject(s): ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES | CHILD EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE | CHILDREN AS VICTIMS | CHILDREN | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES | RESILIENCE | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | YOUNG PEOPLE | EUROPE | GREECE | ITALY | SPAIN | UNITED KINGDOMOnline resources: Click here to access online Summary: This report focuses on children’s experiences of domestic violence, in families affected by domestic violence. This report is concerned with children’s experiences in situations where the main perpetrator and victim of violence would be legally defined as two adults in an intimate relationship (not where the child is involved in ‘dating violence’). Research and professional practice that focuses on children as damaged witnesses to domestic violence tends to describe children as passive and helpless. This study, based on interviews with more than a hundred children across four European countries, recognises the significant suffering caused to children who experience domestic violence. However, it also tells a parallel story, about the capacity of children who experience domestic violence to cope, to maintain a sense of agency, to be resilient, and to find ways of resisting violence, and build a positive sense of who they are. This project highlights the implications of policy and professional discourses that position children as ‘damaged’ and as ‘witnesses’, but that do not recognise children’s capacity to experience domestic violence, make sense of it, and respond to it in ways that are agentic, resilient and resistant. Describing children as ‘witnesses’, ‘exposed to domestic violence’ and ‘damaged by it’ erodes children’s capacity to represent their experiences, and to articulate the ways that they cope with and resist such experiences. By focusing on children’s capacity for conscious meaning making and agency in relation to their experiences of domestic violence, the authors highlight the importance of recognising its impact on children, and their right to representation as victims in the context of domestic violence. (from the Executive summary). Record #4818
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This report focuses on children’s experiences of domestic violence, in families affected by domestic violence. This report is concerned with children’s experiences in situations where the main perpetrator and victim of violence would be legally defined as two adults in an intimate relationship (not where the child is involved in ‘dating violence’). Research and professional practice that focuses on children as damaged witnesses to domestic violence tends to describe children as passive and helpless. This study, based on interviews with more than a hundred children across four European countries, recognises the significant suffering caused to children who experience domestic violence. However, it also tells a parallel story, about the capacity of children who experience domestic violence to cope, to maintain a sense of agency, to be resilient, and to find ways of resisting violence, and build a positive sense of who they are. This project highlights the implications of policy and professional discourses that position children as ‘damaged’ and as ‘witnesses’, but that do not recognise children’s capacity to experience domestic violence, make sense of it, and respond to it in ways that are agentic, resilient and resistant. Describing children as ‘witnesses’, ‘exposed to domestic violence’ and ‘damaged by it’ erodes children’s capacity to represent their experiences, and to articulate the ways that they cope with and resist such experiences. By focusing on children’s capacity for conscious meaning making and agency in relation to their experiences of domestic violence, the authors highlight the importance of recognising its impact on children, and their right to representation as victims in the context of domestic violence. (from the Executive summary). Record #4818