Sentences with phrase «abuse on delinquency»

The Effect of Corporal Punishment and Verbal Abuse on Delinquency: Mediating Mechanisms.

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Applied social services may be concerned with the impacts of father absence on children's social development (including juvenile delinquency and engagement in criminal activities), on the reasons why men do or do not provide child support, or the role of father figures in child physical abuse.
Treatment programs help families build on their strengths by addressing issues, including drug and alcohol abuse, violence, homicide, sexual abuse, family dynamics, parenting, delinquency, diversity and anger management.
Treatment programs help families build on their strengths by addressing issues, including drug and alcohol abuse, violence, homicide, sexual abuse, family dynamics, parenting, delinquency, diversity and anger management.
Skill Highlights Criminal justice Data analysis Public service Office administration Crime trends and patterns Team collaboration and leadership Education and Training University of North Georgia 2016Associate of Science: Criminal JusticeOakwood, GACriminal Justice TrainingFundamentals of Criminal Justiceâ $ cents Gained insight into criminal justice system, including history, philosophy, constitutional limitations, and processes used to achieve overall mission and goals.â $ cents Critically evaluated police, courts and corrections divisions, including contributions to criminal justice system and interrelationship.Fundamentals of Law Enforcementâ $ cents Analyzed and discussed historical and contemporary issues and concepts underlying American policing.â $ cents Examined characteristics and operational mission of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, including their impact on culture on society.Introduction to Social Problemsâ $ cents Investigated methods and theories used by sociologists to explore and define social natures such as culture, socialization, social organization, social institutions, and social stratification.â $ cents Evaluated problems of crime and social deviance, including sexual variance, substance abuse, physical and mental illness, crime and delinquency, and violence in society.
Treatment programs help families build on their strengths by addressing issues, including drug and alcohol abuse, violence, homicide, sexual abuse, family dynamics, parenting, delinquency, diversity and anger management.
Advances in prevention in public health2 provide a model for prevention of adolescent health - risk behaviors by focusing on risk and protective factors predictive of these behaviors.3, 4 Research on the predictors of school failure, delinquency, drug abuse, teen pregnancy, and violence indicates that many of the same factors predict these different outcomes.5, 6 Recent research has shown that bonding to school and family protects against a broad range of health - risk behaviors in adoles cence.6 Yet, prevention studies typically have focused narrowly on a specific outcome, such as preventing substance abuse, and on attitudes and social influences that predict that outcome.7, 8 Previous studies on prevention have not sought to address the shared risk and protective factors for diverse health - risk behaviors that are the main threats to adolescent health.
When it occurs exclusively, it may have more adverse impact on the child and on later adult psychological functioning than the psychological consequences of physical abuse, especially with respect to such measures as depression and self - esteem, 7 aggression, delinquency, or interpersonal problems.8
Previous delinquency, substance abuse, and teen pregnancy prevention programs have been provided in the late elementary or middle school grades, just prior to the ages when delinquent behavior, substance use, and sexual activity increase in prevalence.6, 7,31,32 Yet the social development model that guides the present intervention suggests that early and sustained intervention through the elementary grades should put children on a different developmental trajectory leading to positive outcomes over the long term.
Funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Rockville, Md; Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Washington, DC; and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, NJ.
«The Effects of Single - Mother Families and Nonresident Fathers on Delinquency and Substance Abuse in Black and White Adolescents.»
Applied social services may be concerned with the impacts of father absence on children's social development (including juvenile delinquency and engagement in criminal activities), on the reasons why men do or do not provide child support, or the role of father figures in child physical abuse.
Emphasis is placed on empirically supported programs that have identified key malleable risk factors in children, families, and schools, which have been shown in longitudinal research to be related to later development of substance abuse, delinquency, and violence.
Infants are dependent on their parents and the quality of their parenting skills, and it is therefore important to support the development of parenting skills in new parents, since lack of parenting skills can have detrimental and long term effects on the infants, such as school failure, behavior problems, relationship problems, substance abuse, and delinquency.
Support for the Rochester Youth Development Study and the Rochester Intergenerational Study has been provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (R01CE001572), the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (2006 - JW - BX - 0074, 86 - JN - CX - 0007, 96 - MU - FX - 0014, 2004 - MU - FX - 0062), the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R01DA020195, R01DA005512), the National Science Foundation (SBR - 9123299), and the National Institute of Mental Health (R01MH56486, R01MH63386).
This project was supported by a Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) Rubicon Fellowship to S.B. Data collection was supported through grants to R.L. from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (96 - MU - FX - 0012), the National Institute of Mental Health (50778, 51091), and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (411018).
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