In Child Discipline in African American Families, Carla Adikison-Johnson provides a contextual understanding of African American disciplinary practices, giving clinicians, child welfare professionals, and legal professionals a framework to better define what is reasonable and functional when addressing child rearing concerns with African American parents. Highlighting numerous sources, cases, narratives, and data, Adkison-Johnson debunks the theory that spanking is the preferred method of child discipline for African American parents and provides new insights into how African American parents grapple with establishing parenting goals and child behavior expectations in a society that is often hostile toward African American children. Accompanied by the perspectives of a seasoned trial lawyer, the arguments in this book are brought to life, enabling readers to witness how child rearing concerns can play out in a real-world context.



Autorentext

Carla Adkison-Johnson is professor and interim chairperson for the Department of Counselor Education and Counseling Psychology at Western Michigan University.



Inhalt

Chapter One: Historical and Present Research on African American Child Discipline

Chapter Two: Disciplinary Practices of African American Mothers

Chapter Three: The Disciplinary Practices of African American Fathers

Chapter Four: Forging a United Front: Mothers and Fathers Working Together

Chapter Five: Culturally Responsive Service Delivery: Implications for Clinicians and Child Protective Service Workers

Chapter Six: Addressing Child Discipline in Court: Perspective from a Trial Lawyer

Chapter Seven: Recommendations and Implications for Future Research, Training, and Practice

Titel
Child Discipline in African American Families
Untertitel
Culturally Responsive Policies
EAN
9781793620941
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
22.02.2021
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.93 MB
Anzahl Seiten
134