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Cultural and Ecological Contexts of Violent Punishment and Restraint of Negev Bedouin Children: From Understandings to Interventions

NCJ Number
231818
Journal
Child Abuse Review Volume: 19 Issue: 4 Dated: July/August 2010 Pages: 273-290
Author(s)
Yaakov Garb; Tsofit Goren
Date Published
July 2010
Length
18 pages
Annotation
Over recent decades, researchers have become increasingly sensitised to the importance of considering the cultural and ecological contexts of child abuse. This paper illustrates the necessity for but also the complexity of doing so in practice, through reflection on some of the dilemmas faced by social work professionals encountering physical punishment and restraint of children among the Negev Bedouin. This paper describes several cases and reflects on two central challenges.
Abstract
First, the paper points to a significant gray area remaining between consensually unacceptable and consensually acceptable practices, and show how the evaluation of worrying incidents of this kind requires careful reading of the complex interplay of a variety of cultural and contextual factors which are sometimes not easily resolved. Second, the paper highlights the need for cultural competence not just in understanding but in intervening since cultural differences continue to be importantsometimes critically soin the ways in which social work interventions are understood by and affect clients and communities. The authors offer a schema for intervention, distilled from decades of experience working in the Bedouin setting, which describes the kind of decisionmaking processes a social worker might follow in this context. This is intended to guide practitioners, but also to be used more interactively and further evolved in discussion with parents and members of the Bedouin community on the one hand, and those shaping state child care policies and procedures on the other. Thus, our schema is a kind of boundary objecta shared instrument for assessment and dialogue in which both Bedouin and professional cultures can negotiate and renegotiate their caring for children at the interface between their different but intersecting worlds. Figure and references (Published Abstract)