ABSTRACT

It is estimated that approximately 300,000 children actively serve in various kinds of military groups around the world. Some of these children are forcibly conscripted through abduction or threats of violence to themselves or their families, others are coerced or manipulated into joining, and still others are more subtly compelled by circumstances that lead choosing to enlist to represent the lesser of the evils life has placed before them. No matter how they come to serve in war, however, child soldiers are exposed to, subjected to, and often forced to perpetrate horrors that meet or exceed our diagnostic criteria for trauma exposure.

This volume brings together leading investigators in the field to share new research regarding the traumatic impact of child soldiering from diverse international contexts, including Burundi, Colombia, Liberia, Mozambique, Nepal, Sierra Leone, Uganda, and—provocatively—among gang-involved youth in the United States. Contributions include data from longitudinal studies following former child soldiers into adulthood as well as investigations of the intergenerational impact of childhood conscription on former child combatants own children. In addition, research presented in this volume uncovers sources of resilience among these youth and details efforts to bring trauma-informed intervention and rehabilitation programs to these war-torn regions.

This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment and Trauma.

part 1|121 pages

New Research on Trauma, Psychopathology and Resilience among Child Soldiers around the World

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

New Research on Trauma, Psychopathology, and Resilience among Child Soldiers around the World

part |25 pages

Implications of International Research on Child Soldiers for Studying in the US

part 2|105 pages

Interventions to Promote Reintegration of Traumatized Youth Conscripted as Child Soldiers

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Interventions to Promote Reintegration of Traumatized Youth Conscripted as Child Soldiers

part |29 pages

Toward the Future: Implications of Research and Intervention with Traumatized Former Child Soldiers

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion

The Person and the Social Context: Future Directions for Research on the Traumatic Effects of Child Soldiering Around the World