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Abstract Children suffer more victimizations than do adults, including more conventional crimes, more family violence, and some forms virtually unique to children, such as family abduction. On the basis of national statistics, these victimizations can be grouped into three broad categories: the pandemic, such as sibling assault, affecting most children; the acute, such as physical abuse, affecting a fractional but significant percentage; and the extraordinary, such as homicide, affecting a very small group. They can also be differentiated by the degree to which they result from the unique dependency status of children. A field called the victimology of childhood should be defined that adopts a developmental approach to understanding children's vulnerability to different types of victimizations and their different effects.
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David Finkelhor
University of New Hampshire
Jennifer Dzuiba-Leatherman
American Psychologist
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Finkelhor et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1dc39449e88a0d4160188b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/0003-066x.49.3.173