US national taskforce releases report on children exposed to violence


Thu 13 Dec 2012

The US Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence has presented its final report and policy recommendations. The ...

The US Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence has presented its final report and policy recommendations.

The report highlights the importance of identifying children who are victims or witnesses of violence and providing support and services to help them heal. It focuses on developing programs to help children access supportive and non-violent relationships with trusted adults in their homes and communities. The task force also calls for all children who enter the juvenile justice system to be screened for exposure to violence.

The task force emphasises, "We can stem this epidemic if we commit to a strong national response. The long-term negative outcomes of exposure to violence can be prevented, and children exposed to violence can be helped to recover. Children exposed to violence can heal if we identify them early and give them specialized services,  evidence-based treatment, and proper care and support. We have the power to end the damage to children from violence and abuse in our country; it does not need to be inevitable." (pp.v-vi)

The Taskforce's recommendations in relation to children exposed to violence and abuse at home are as follows:

4.1 Expand access to home visiting services for families with children who are exposed to violence, focusing on safety and referral to services.

4.2 Increase collaborative responses by police, mental health providers, domestic violence advocates, child protective service workers, and court personnel for women and children who are victimized by intimate partner violence.

4.3 Ensure that parents who are victims of domestic violence have access to services and counseling that help them protect and care for their children.

4.4 When domestic violence and child sexual or physical abuse co-occur, ensure that the dependency and family courts, the child protection system, and domestic violence programs work together to create protocols and policies that protect children and adult victims.

4.5 Create multidisciplinary councils or coalitions to assure systemwide collaboration and coordinated community responses to children exposed to family violence.

4.6 Provide families affected by sexual abuse, physical abuse, and domestic violence with education and services to prevent further abuse, to respond to the adverse effects on the family, and to enable the children to recover.

4.7 Ensure that parenting programs in child- and family-serving agencies, including fatherhood programs and other programs specifically for men, integrate strategies for preventing domestic violence and sexual assault and include reparation strategies when violence has already occurred.

4.8 Provide support and counseling to address the unique consequences for children exposed to lethal violence, both in the home as a result of domestic violence homicides and suicides, and in the community.

4.9 Develop interventions in all child- and family-serving agencies that build on the assets and values of each family’s culture of origin and incorporate the linguistic and acculturation challenges of immigrant children and parents.

4.10 Ensure compliance with the letter and spirit of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).

4.11 Initiate a nationally sponsored program similar to the Department of Defense’s community and family support programs that provides military families with specialized services focused on building strengths and resilience, new parent support, youth programs, and forging partnerships with communities.

'Defending Childhood: Protect, Heal, Thrive - Report of the Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence' (PDF 891 KB)

'Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence Presents Final Findings, Recommendations to Attorney General', US Department of Justice, 12/12/12