It can be said, however, that South Africa is clearly a child-abusing nation. The point of interest here is that South Africans have always abused their children but the media never reflected this practice in depth until 1988. Further more, when it did focus on the crime, it did so ...
Summary points: Until recently the international medical communitys view of HIV/AIDS in South Africa has been dominated by the argument over President Mbek... D Fassin,H Schneider - Bmj 被引量: 188发表: 2003年 Psychotherapy of Sexually Abused Children and Their Families The article reviews the...
Most people affected by HIV and tuberculosis live in sub-Saharan Africa where young adults have the highest incidence of both diseases. HIV transmission routes are well established in most adults and young children but are sometimes unclear in older children and teenagers. Sexual abuse may play an...
Child Sexual Abuse Allegations: Challenges Faced by Social Workers in Child Protection OrganisationsChild Sexual Abuse Allegations: Challenges Faced by Social Workers in Child Protection Organisationsdoi:10.1080/09503153.2016.1269884SocialSciences(miscellaneous)Sociology...
first the invention of the camera in the early nineteenth century and more recently the advent of the Internet and associated digital technologies towards the end of the twentieth century. The Internet, in particular, has transformed the production, dissemination, and consumption of child pornography,...
Liked We recommend Childhood sexual abuse and HIV sexual-risk behaviour among men who have sex with men in South Africa Shelley Heusser, South African Journal of Psychology, 2014 The prevalence and characteristics of child sexual abuse among South African university students : a response to S.J....
Child Abuse Negl. 2019;92:93–105. Article Google Scholar Gershoff ET. School corporal punishment in global perspective: prevalence, outcomes, and efforts at intervention. Psychol Health Med. 2017;22(sup1):224–39. Article Google Scholar UNICEF. A familiar face: violence in the lives of ...
“While the nationalities of some of the soldiers remain unclear, three of the girls said they believed their abusers were members of the Georgian EUFOR contingent. The four girls were aged between 14 and 16 at the time of the alleged abuse.” ...
Children in Bangladesh are vulnerable to being trafficked into bonded labour or brothels; being sexually abused in the home, the workplace, community and at school; and being sexually exploited. There are few protections in place for children such as these. ...
Internationally, there is a wealth of research suggesting that many children and young people experience mental health problems. However, the evidence from low- and middle-income countries and developing nations is generally limited. This scoping review