ABSTRACT

Multicultural Child Maltreatment Risk Assessment provides detailed descriptions of child maltreatment assessment and key strategies for culturally informed risk assessment in families.

The book presents a new model for evaluating families that includes cultural competence, a conceptualization of adequate parenting, and strategies for reflective decision making. Chapters address a range of factors including race, ethnicity, religion, gender, and sexuality. Ten case studies, each including discussion prompts, challenge the reader to apply forensic evaluation techniques for effective and ethical decision making in complex and ambiguous cases. Both experienced mental health providers and students will come away from the book with a deeper understanding of child maltreatment and its effects, models and modes of assessment, and factors that place families at greater risk.

chapter Chapter Two|22 pages

Defining Child Maltreatment

chapter Chapter Three|25 pages

Effects of Child Maltreatment

chapter Chapter Four|29 pages

Families at Risk

chapter Chapter Five|20 pages

Assessing Families for Risk

chapter Chapter Six|22 pages

Assessing Children for Maltreatment

chapter Chapter Seven|29 pages

Multicultural Considerations in Assessment

chapter Chapter Eight|22 pages

The Adequate Parent

chapter Chapter Nine|21 pages

Decision Making in Child Maltreatment Risk Assessment