Faculty Book-Length Publications (selected works)

Debating Divorce: Moral Conflict in Ireland

by Michele Dillon
University Press of Kentucky, 1993

Childhood Victimization: Violence, Crime, and Abuse in the Lives of Young People

by David Finkelhor
Oxford University Press, 2008

excerpt from book cover: In this persuasive book, David Finkelhor presents a comprehensive new vision to encompass the prevention, treatment, and study of juvenile victims, unifying conventional subdivisions like child molestation, child abuse, bullying, and exposure to community violence. Developmental victimology, his term for this integrated perspective, looks at child victimization across childhood's span and yields fascinating insights about how to categorize juvenile victimizations, how to think about risk and impact, and how victimization patterns change over the course of development. The book also provides a valuable new model of society's response to child victimization - what Finkelhor calls the Juvenile Victim Justice System - and a fresh way of thinking about barriers that victims and their families encounter when seeking help. These models will be very useful to anyone seeking to improve the way we try to help child victims. Crimes against children still happen far too often, but by proposing a new framework for thinking about the issue, Childhood Victimization opens a promising door to reducing its frequency and improving the response. Professionals, policymakers, and child advocates will find this paradigm-shifting book to be a valuable addition to their shelves.

 

A Sourcebook on Child Sexual Abuse

by David Finkelhor
Sage Publications, Inc., 1986

License to Rape

by David Finkelor and Kersti Yllo
Henry Holt & Co, 1985

excerpt from book cover: Ending marital rape is no simple goal. The steps to providing help for current victims and prosecuting the rapists will require enormous energy. Actually ending marital rape is a goal that is inseparable from the larger efforts to end the oppression of women. Physical and sexual attacks against women are not isolated events. They are part of the social fabric in which economic and legal inequalities, sexist attitudes, exploitation of women’s bodies, and violence are all interwoven.

 

Child Sexual Abuse

by David Finkelhor
Free Press, 1984




Department of Sociology  •  College of Liberal Arts  •  University of New Hampshire
Horton Social Science Center  •  20 Academic Way  •  Durham, NH 03824
Phone (603) 862-2500  •  Fax (603) 862-3558
ADA Disclaimer | Contact Us