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Journal Article

Citation

Pérez-Sales P. Torture 2019; 29(1): 1-15.

Affiliation

SiR[a] Centre, GAC Community Action Group and Hospital La Paz, Spain. Correspondence to: pauperez@arrakis.es.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, International Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims)

DOI

10.7146/torture.v29i1.114028

PMID

31264812

Abstract

Editorial.

Documenting torture in children and young adults (ChYA) is a challenge. Less than 3% of academic papers on documentation and rehabilitation of torture victims are focused on children and youth. In the Delphi study on research priorities in the sector (Pérez-Sales, Witcombe, & Otero Oyague, 2017), five lines were proposed regarding torture in children, which covered: developmental disruptions related to the torture of relatives; developmental deficits related to infant torture; the effect on caregivers of torture/kidnapping of their children; the impact of torture on identity and worldviews among adolescents; and transgenerational trauma. The latter was considered among the 40 top research priorities. In this editorial, we briefly review: aspects related to the notion of torture as applied to ChYA; specific ethical problems in forensic documentation; and challenges in consistency statements. By doing so, we aim to outline key challenges that researchers and practitioners ought to pursue.

Keywords: Istanbul Protocol, torture documentation, torture in children and young adults


Language: en

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