As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of children (United Nations 1989) in all settings, including the home (Global Initiative to End All Corporal Punishment of Children, n.d.) By January 2017 this number had reached 52. As the trend moves towards abolition, it is not an acceptable position for the United Kingdom (UK), the United States of America (USA) and Australia (Poulsen, 2015) to remain missing from that list. Whilst they are, effectively, a child (a person aged under 18 years of age), is the only person in all three countries that it is legal to hit. This article seeks to restate arguments in this area in a simple way to restart the debate in a modern context where understandi...
This article from law and child psychology provides a thorough description of relevant state laws, j...
This article describes the current laws regarding parental corporal punishment against children in H...
This article reviews an epochal change in international thinking about physical punishment of childr...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article proceeds from the simple premise that hitting children hurts them-even when the hitting...
Although the physical punishment of children is overall an ineffective disciplining strategy, has ad...
The classic English case of Williams v Eady (1893) had, for over a century, supported a teacher acti...
In January 2020, the Welsh parliament passed the Children (Abolition of Defence of Reasonable Punish...
An independent report by Sir Roger Singleton, Chief Adviser on the Safety of Children (March 2010)
Abstract Physical punishment remains a common practice in the USA despite significant empirical evid...
Objective: Across all of Australia's states and territories, it is legal for a parent or carer to hi...
This article reflects on the boundary between acceptable and unacceptable violence through an examin...
The laws against cruelty to children in England and Wales endorse the common law defence of ‘reasona...
One of the key responsibilities of parents is to help children learn to manage their emotions and be...
This article from law and child psychology provides a thorough description of relevant state laws, j...
This article describes the current laws regarding parental corporal punishment against children in H...
This article reviews an epochal change in international thinking about physical punishment of childr...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article proceeds from the simple premise that hitting children hurts them-even when the hitting...
Although the physical punishment of children is overall an ineffective disciplining strategy, has ad...
The classic English case of Williams v Eady (1893) had, for over a century, supported a teacher acti...
In January 2020, the Welsh parliament passed the Children (Abolition of Defence of Reasonable Punish...
An independent report by Sir Roger Singleton, Chief Adviser on the Safety of Children (March 2010)
Abstract Physical punishment remains a common practice in the USA despite significant empirical evid...
Objective: Across all of Australia's states and territories, it is legal for a parent or carer to hi...
This article reflects on the boundary between acceptable and unacceptable violence through an examin...
The laws against cruelty to children in England and Wales endorse the common law defence of ‘reasona...
One of the key responsibilities of parents is to help children learn to manage their emotions and be...
This article from law and child psychology provides a thorough description of relevant state laws, j...
This article describes the current laws regarding parental corporal punishment against children in H...
This article reviews an epochal change in international thinking about physical punishment of childr...