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Policy Implications and
Recommendations
This section addresses issues relating to
the reporting, assessment, and treatment
of children involved in animal abuse. It
presents recommendations associated
with these issues and highlights the need
for enhanced professional training.
Reporting
Cruelty to animals is all too often a part of
the landscape of violence in which youth
participate and to which they are exposed.
The number of animals that are victims of
such abuse is, at present, difficult to estimate,
as is the number of young people
who perpetrate such abuse. In an ideal
world, national data would be available on
the yearly incidence of animal abuse, data
that could be used to track trends and
serve as a baseline against which the
effectiveness of interventions could be
assessed. The existing national data collection
systems in the area of child abuse
and neglect illustrate the value of such
archival records (Sedlak and Broadhurst,
1996). However, it is not clear how animal
abuse offenses could be incorporated into
the existing categorization (person, property,
drug, public order) of juvenile arrests.
Only two States (Minnesota and West Virginia)
mandate that veterinarians report
suspected cases of animal abuse (Frasch
et al., 1999). Until a national system of
monitoring and reporting animal abuse
is instituted, the following approaches
to recording cases of animal abuse are
recommended:
- Local humane societies, societies for
the prevention of cruelty to animals,
and animal control agencies should routinely
refer cases of serious, juvenile- and adult-perpetrated animal abuse to
social welfare and law enforcement
agencies and should maintain systematic
records that could be available for
archival review (Ascione and Barnard,
1998; Ascione, Kaufmann, and Brooks,
2000).
- Parents, childcare providers, teachers,
others who play caregiving roles for
children (e.g., clergy, coaches), and
young people themselves should be informed
that animal abuse may be a significant
sign of a tendency to violence
and psychological disturbance and
should not be ignored. Efforts in this
area are already emerging and include
Early Warning, Timely Response: A
Guide to Safe Schools (Dwyer, Osher,
and Warger, 1998) from the U.S. Department
of Education and the Warning
Signs guide (1999) developed by MTV-Music
TelevisionTM and the American
Psychological Association and disseminated
as part of their Fight for Your
Rights: Take a Stand Against Violence
campaign. The American Humane
Association’s (1996) Growing Up Humane
in a Violent World: A Parent’s
Guide provides developmentally sensitive
information about children and
animals and the significance of animal
abuse. The Guide also includes educational
strategies appropriate for
preschoolers and some designed for
elementary and secondary school
students.
- Youth should be surveyed about their
treatment of animals. Because animals
may often be abused covertly, parents
and other adults may not be the best
sources of information about this behavior
problem. To obtain a better estimate
of the incidence of animal
abuse, youth surveys of violent behavior
should include self-report items
such as "Have you hurt an animal on
purpose?" or "Have you made an animal
suffer for no reason?" Also, witnessing
animal abuse is a form of
exposure to violence that should be
routinely assessed because it may have
significant effects on young people
(Boat, 1999). Often children are deeply
attached to their pets and observing
the violent abuse or death of a pet at
the hands of others may be emotionally
devastating.
Assessment and Treatment
As part of the search for effective youth
violence prevention and intervention programs,
animal welfare organizations have
been developing educational and therapeutic
efforts that incorporate "animal-assisted"
or "animal-facilitated" components
(Duel, 2000). The underlying theme
of many of these programs is that teaching
young people to train, care for, and
interact in a nurturing manner with animals
will reduce any propensity they may
have for aggression and violence. These
programs assume that children are more
likely to commit animal abuse when their
capacity for empathy has been undermined
or compromised (for example, by
years of neglect or maltreatmentsee
Bavolek, 2000). Developing a sense of
empathy for animals is assumed to be
a bridge to greater empathy for fellow
human beings, making violence toward
them less likely.
The development of animal abuse assessment
and intervention programs is accompanied
by a number of issues related to
evaluation and accountability:
- Although formal protocols for the clinical
assessment (Lewchanin and Zimmerman,
2000) and treatment (Jory and
Randour, 1999; Zimmerman and Lewchanin,
2000) of animal abuse are beginning
to emerge, they are still at a formative
stage of development and their
effectiveness is difficult to evaluate.
- Attempts have been made to create
typologies for perpetrators of animal
abuse, similar to typologies for firesetters.
These typologies have intuitive
appeal, but their utility has not been
empirically assessed. Whether using
the proposed categories of animal
abusers can facilitate the selection of
appropriate therapeutic interventions
remains to be determined.
- Given the challenges of incorporating
animals into the therapeutic process
(Fine, 2000), evaluation of animal-facilitated
therapy programs must
move beyond anecdotal evidence.
Katcher and Wilkins (2000) provided an
evaluation model in a study of animal-facilitated
therapy for children with
attention disorders. The model should
be expanded to programs for youth
with CD.
- Evaluation of intervention effectiveness
will continue to grow in importance
because, in some jurisdictions (e.g.,
California, Colorado), courts may recommend
or mandate assessment and
treatment of individuals convicted of
certain forms of animal abuse (Frasch et
al., 1999). The effects of such programs
on recidivism have not been examined.
Training
Educational programs at both the preprofessional
and professional levels should
give greater emphasis to training about
animal abuse and its overlap with other
forms of family and community violence.
This effort has already emerged in veterinary
education (Ascione and Barnard,
1998), the legal profession (Davidson,
1998), and law enforcement (Lockwood,
1989) and should be expanded to include
mental health (psychology and psychiatry)
and other human health professions
(e.g., social work, child welfare, and pediatrics)
and elementary and secondary
education. The following are recommendations
for improving and expanding professional
training concerning animal abuse:
- Professional cross training should be
expanded (Ascione, Kaufmann, and
Brooks, 2000). For example, animal
control officers should be trained to
identify signs of child maltreatment
and child protection workers should be
trained to identify animal abuse. The
underlying theme of such training
should be that animal abuse is a significant
form of violence that not only
harms animals but may be a warning
sign of a child who is psychologically
disturbed or in danger of maltreatment.
- Training and continuing education for
judges should include current information
on the associations among animal
abuse, domestic violence, and child
maltreatment. Decisions about child
custody and foster placements should
be informed by research showing that
adults who abuse animals are potentially
dangerous to humans.
- Cross training could also enhance the
success of foster placements for maltreated
children who may be physically
or sexually abusing animals. Foster
care providers, especially those with
family pets, should be alerted to the
potential for animal abuse to occur.
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| Animal Abuse and
Youth Violence |
Juvenile
Justice Bulletin September 2001 |
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