Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Germany; Vivo (Victim's Voice) International, Allensbach, Germany.
Child Abuse Negl. 2014 Jan;38(1):135-46. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2013.10.007. Epub 2013 Nov 14.
After 20 years of civil war in Northern Uganda, the continuity of violence within the family constitutes a major challenge to children's healthy development in the post-conflict era. Previous exposure to trauma and ongoing psychopathology in guardians potentially contribute to parental perpetration against children and dysfunctional interactions in the child's family ecology that increase children's risk of maltreatment. In order to investigate distal and proximal risk factors of child victimization, we first aimed to identify factors leading to more self-reported perpetration in guardians. Second, we examined factors in the child's family environment that promote child-reported experiences of maltreatment. Using a two-generational design we interviewed 368 children, 365 female guardians, and 304 male guardians from seven war-affected rural communities in Northern Uganda on the basis of standardized questionnaires. We found that the strongest predictors of self-reported aggressive parenting behaviors toward the child were guardians' own experiences of childhood maltreatment, followed by female guardians' victimization experiences in their intimate relationship and male guardians' posttrautmatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and alcohol-related problems. Regarding children's self-report of victimization in the family, proximal factors including violence between adults in the household and male guardians' PTSD symptom severity level predicted higher levels of maltreatment. Distal variables such as female guardians' history of childhood victimization and female guardians' exposure to traumatic war events also increased children's report of maltreatment. The current findings suggest that in the context of organized violence, an intergenerational cycle of violence persists that is exacerbated by female guardians' re-victimization experiences and male guardians' psychopathological symptoms.
在乌干达北部经历了 20 年的内战之后,家庭内部暴力的持续存在对冲突后时代儿童的健康发展构成了重大挑战。以前经历过创伤和监护人性心理病理学的持续存在,可能导致父母对儿童的虐待行为以及儿童家庭生态系统中的功能失调互动,从而增加儿童受虐待的风险。为了调查儿童受害的远因和近因风险因素,我们首先旨在确定导致监护人更多自我报告虐待行为的因素。其次,我们研究了儿童家庭环境中的因素,这些因素促进了儿童报告的虐待经历。我们采用两代设计,在乌干达北部七个受战争影响的农村社区,根据标准化问卷,对 368 名儿童、365 名女性监护人和 304 名男性监护人进行了访谈。我们发现,对儿童进行自我报告的攻击性养育行为的最强预测因素是监护人自己的童年虐待经历,其次是女性监护人在亲密关系中的受害经历和男性监护人的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状和与酒精有关的问题。关于儿童在家庭中自我报告的受害情况,包括家庭中成年人之间的暴力行为和男性监护人 PTSD 症状严重程度在内的近端因素预测了更高水平的虐待。远因变量,如女性监护人的童年受害史和女性监护人经历的创伤性战争事件,也增加了儿童受虐待的报告。目前的研究结果表明,在有组织暴力的背景下,存在代际暴力循环,女性监护人的再次受害经历和男性监护人的心理病理症状加剧了这种循环。