The complex interrelationships between age, class, ethnicity, poverty, sexual orientation and a number of other social divisions have a significant impact upon the experience of domestic violence and abuse (DVA) (Sokoloff & Dupont, 2006). In dialogue with other feminist approaches to marginalised ...
Social work policy in the UK, and public discourse informed by this policy, insists that children need permanent and secure homes. In finding homes for children, preserving and nourishing their identities is prioritised. Faith can be a key aspect of children’s identities, yet there is limited ...
www.bristol.ac.uk/media-library/sites/geography/pfrc/Geography%20of%20gambling%20premises.pdf Google Scholar Freytag et al., 2020 C. Freytag, J. Lee, N. Hing, D. Tully The Dangerous Combination of Gambling and Domestic and Family Violence against Women: Practice Guide for Gambling Counsellor...
While girls face higher rates of sexual violence, boys are frequently at greater risk of other types of physical violence such as bullying and corporal punishment both as survivors and perpetrators (Pinheiro 2006). They are also at significantly greater risk of suicide and substance abuse, ...
34 The US National Network for Ending Domestic Violence compiled app safety considerations for survivors of abuse to keep data safe.32 Abusers who have access to victims' phones can monitor their location, access the health data the app collects, and even install spyware.33 Sensitive apps, for ...
result in further exclusion or marginalisation. For example, government policies and non-government organisation (NGO) practices can lead to a loss of personal and communal spaces that expose them to verbal and physical abuse and stigmatisation [13]. Kolkawski-Hayner and Goldin [14] argue that...