Post-divorce parenting and fatal violence : separate worlds and tense relations Sietske Dijkstra and Wil Verhoeven
By: Dijkstra, Sietske.
Contributor(s): Verhoeven, Wil.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Social Work Now.Publisher: Child, Youth and Family, 2015Subject(s): CHILD ABUSE | CONTACT (ACCESS) | CHILD HOMICIDE | CHILD PROTECTION | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | FATHERS | FILICIDE | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MOTHERS | PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE | SEPARATION | SUICIDE | VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | NEW ZEALAND | THE NETHERLANDSOnline resources: Dowload archived journal issue, PDF In: Social Work Now, 2015, 52: 13-19Summary: In this article the authors examine a case from The Netherlands where a father murdered his sons and committed suicide in the context of a high conflict separation. The authors draw lessons from the findings of the enquiry into the case, exploring how the integration of specialised knowledge and procedures can add extra value to the way in which work is undertaken and organised. This issue of Social Work Now has been archived by National Library of New Zealand. Record #5552Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON17080014 |
Social Work Now, 2015, 52: 13-19
In this article the authors examine a case from The Netherlands where a father murdered his sons and committed suicide in the context of a high conflict separation. The authors draw lessons from the findings of the enquiry into the case, exploring how the integration of specialised knowledge and procedures can add extra value to the way in which work is undertaken and organised.
This issue of Social Work Now has been archived by National Library of New Zealand. Record #5552