This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of children who experience domestic violence. Academic, popular and professional discourses around domestic violence (DV) tend to represent children and young people (CYP) as passive witnesses and victims - as individuals who watch, who suffer from and who are damaged by the violence (e.g. Rivett and Howarth, 2006; Spilsbury et al, 2007). We consider how constructs like ‘witness’, ‘trauma’ and ‘exposure’ operate in psychological and other health and social care discourses of children, exploring the implications of such constructions for young people’s identities. In particular we explore how such accounts constrain the articulation of more agentic and ...
Academic and professional literature on domestic violence tends to represent children and young peop...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Objective: This paper engages critically with the claim, present in most psychological literature, t...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
Children who experience domestic violence are often described in academic and professional literatur...
This chapter explores children’s experiences of domestic violence. Academic research on domestic vio...
The aim of this article is, by analysing childrens discourses, to investigate their actions or absen...
Children’s experiences and voices are underrepresented in academic literature and professional pract...
The established literature on children's experiences of domestic violence positions young people as ...
This article employs a critical psycho-discursive approach to social identity processes and subjecti...
Academic and professional literature on domestic violence tends to represent children and young peop...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Objective: This paper engages critically with the claim, present in most psychological literature, t...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
This paper takes a critical discursive and feminist perspective on psychological accounts of childre...
Children who experience domestic violence are often described in academic and professional literatur...
This chapter explores children’s experiences of domestic violence. Academic research on domestic vio...
The aim of this article is, by analysing childrens discourses, to investigate their actions or absen...
Children’s experiences and voices are underrepresented in academic literature and professional pract...
The established literature on children's experiences of domestic violence positions young people as ...
This article employs a critical psycho-discursive approach to social identity processes and subjecti...
Academic and professional literature on domestic violence tends to represent children and young peop...
This article explores how children see their relationships, particularly their sibling relationships...
Objective: This paper engages critically with the claim, present in most psychological literature, t...