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Journal Article

Citation

Elliott JM, Tong CK, Tan PM. Child Abuse Negl. 1997; 21(5): 445-464.

Affiliation

Psychology, National University of Singapore, Republic of Singapore.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9158905

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim was to ascertain the views of the Singapore public on the acceptability of actions of an abusive nature. METHOD: In-depth interviews were carried out with 401 randomly sampled respondents in relation to a range of actions. Questions were asked concerning the acceptability of 18 actions, whether circumstances might justify eight of them, how respondents felt about reporting child abuse and whether they could recall any case they had come across. RESULTS: Respondents strongly disapproved of sexually motivated acts, and were more disapproving of physical abuse or neglect than of emotional abuse or neglect. Circumstances did affect how the less extreme actions were viewed. Respondents supported reporting child abuse, but were somewhat against mandatory reporting. They were able to recall details of a number of possible cases. CONCLUSION: We argue that definitions of child abuse should be general and not tied to specific actions, since the effects of actions may vary across cultures, and should be treated as an empirical matter. This allows a research agenda that focuses on the consequences of actions rather than issues of definition.


Language: en

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