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OverviewBroken Three Times is a story about child abuse in America. It begins with snapshots from a mother's abusive childhood, then fast-forwards to her family's first involvement with Connecticut protective services when her children are eleven and ten. After a brief investigation, the family's case is closed, and despite their many needs, they are not provided links to any ongoing supportive services. Over the next five years we see the children pass through nearly twenty placements, while their mother continually relapses on crack and moves from one violent relationship to the next. Each chapter of the book provides a launching point for discussing state-of-the-art policy, practice, and scientific updates relevant for understanding risk, promoting resilience, and improving the child welfare system. This book will provide readers with some information about innovations and recent improvements in the system, concrete steps to take to enhance practice, ongoing gaps in our knowledge, and a deepening appreciation of the value of incorporating broad perspectives into this work--from neurobiology to social policy. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Joan Kaufman (Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.399kg ISBN: 9780199399154ISBN 10: 0199399158 Pages: 160 Publication Date: 07 April 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews""While this book reads like fiction, the story is all too typical of the experience of families in the Nation's child welfare system. Summaries in each chapter on what we know, or don't know about ways to address the results of trauma are invaluable for anyone working in child welfare. This is essential reading for anyone engaged in child welfare advocacy, policy or systems reform."" --Carole Shauffer, JD, MEd, Senior Director, Strategic Initiatives, Youth Law Center ""Kaufman seamlessly links her authentic, compelling, and riveting case history of one family's journey through the US child welfare system to the underlying research in neuroscience, epidemiology, and evidence-based practice. I highly recommend this powerful clinical, scientific, and policy page-turner to all concerned with improving services for children and families who have experienced trauma."" --John A. Fairbank, Ph.D., Co-Director, UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC USA ""This is a remarkable story, told masterfully by one of the world's leading researchers on childhood trauma. Sadly, it is not remarkable because it is unusual, but because Kaufman so compellingly conveys the tragic consequences of addiction, and our ineffective efforts to protect maltreated children through a deeply moving portrait of intergenerational trauma. It is at once a compassionate but searing account of one family's pain, a guide to the scientific questions that emanate from maltreatment, and a consideration of some policies that might make a difference. I consider it nothing less than an urgent call for reform on a national scale."" --Charles H. Zeanah, Mary Peters Sellars Polchow Chair in Psychiatry, Tulane University While this book reads like fiction, the story is all too typical of the experience of families in the Nation's child welfare system. Summaries in each chapter on what we know, or don't know about ways to address the results of trauma are invaluable for anyone working in child welfare. This is essential reading for anyone engaged in child welfare advocacy, policy or systems reform. --Carole Shauffer, JD, MEd, Senior Director, Strategic Initiatives, Youth Law Center Kaufman seamlessly links her authentic, compelling, and riveting case history of one family's journey through the US child welfare system to the underlying research in neuroscience, epidemiology, and evidence-based practice. I highly recommend this powerful clinical, scientific, and policy page-turner to all concerned with improving services for children and families who have experienced trauma. --John A. Fairbank, Ph.D., Co-Director, UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC USA This is a remarkable story, told masterfully by one of the world's leading researchers on childhood trauma. Sadly, it is not remarkable because it is unusual, but because Kaufman so compellingly conveys the tragic consequences of addiction, and our ineffective efforts to protect maltreated children through a deeply moving portrait of intergenerational trauma. It is at once a compassionate but searing account of one family's pain, a guide to the scientific questions that emanate from maltreatment, and a consideration of some policies that might make a difference. I consider it nothing less than an urgent call for reform on a national scale. --Charles H. Zeanah, Mary Peters Sellars Polchow Chair in Psychiatry, Tulane University While this book reads like fiction, the story is all too typical of the experience of families in the Nation's child welfare system. Summaries in each chapter on what we know, or don't know about ways to address the results of trauma are invaluable for anyone working in child welfare. This is essential reading for anyone engaged in child welfare advocacy, policy or systems reform. --Carole Shauffer, JD, MEd, Senior Director, Strategic Initiatives, Youth Law Center Kaufman seamlessly links her authentic, compelling, and riveting case history of one family's journey through the US child welfare system to the underlying research in neuroscience, epidemiology, and evidence-based practice. I highly recommend this powerful clinical, scientific, and policy page-turner to all concerned with improving services for children and families who have experienced trauma. --John A. Fairbank, Ph.D., Co-Director, UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, NC USA This is a remarkable story, told masterfully by one of the world's leading researchers on childhood trauma. Sadly, it is not remarkable because it is unusual, but because Kaufman so compellingly conveys the tragic consequences of addiction, and our ineffective efforts to protect maltreated children through a deeply moving portrait of intergenerational trauma. It is at once a compassionate but searing account of one family's pain, a guide to the scientific questions that emanate from maltreatment, and a consideration of some policies that might make a difference. I consider it nothing less than an urgent call for reform on a national scale. --Charles H. Zeanah, Mary Peters Sellars Polchow Chair in Psychiatry, Tulane University Author InformationJoan Kaufman, PhD, received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Yale University where she was on faculty in the Department of Psychiatry from 1998-2015. She is currently Director of Research at the Center for Child and Family Traumatic Stress at Kennedy Krieger Institute, and has joint faculty appointments in Psychiatry and the School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |