Edited by Jeffrey L. Edleson and Oliver J. Williams
What is the best way to work with fathers who have a history of abusive behavior? This question is among the thorniest that social service and criminal justice professionals must deal with in their careers, and in this essential new work Jeffrey L. Edleson, Oliver J. Williams, and a group of
international colleagues examine the host of equally difficult issues that surround it.
Beginning with the voices of mothers and fathers who speak about men's contact with and parenting of their children, the authors then examine court and mental health services perspectives on how much
involvement violent men should have in their children's lives. The second half of the book showcases programs such as the Boston-based Fathering After Violence initiative and the Caring Dads program in Canada, which introduce non-abusive parenting concepts and skills to batterers and have developed
useful guidelines for intervention with these fathers.
Visionary but also practical, Parenting by Men Who Batter distills the most relevant policy issues, research findings, and practice considerations for those who coordinate batterer programs or work with families, the courts, and the
child welfare system. It guides professionals in understanding men who batter, assessing their parenting skills, making decisions about custody and visitation, and modeling treatment programs that engage fathers in their children's lives while maximizing safety.
1. Jeffrey L. Edleson and Oliver J. Williams: Introduction: Involving Men Who Batter in Their Children's Lives
2. Shared Parenting After Abuse: Battered Mothers' Perspectives on Parenting After Dissolution of a Relationship
Chapter Inserts: Fathers' Voices on Parenting and Violence.
Tricia Bent-Goodley and Oliver J. Williams:
3. Peter G. Jaffe and Claire V. Crooks: Assessing the Best Interests of the Child: Visitation and Custody in Cases of Domestic Violence
4. Betsy McAlister Groves, Patricia Van Horn, and Alicia F. Lieberman: Deciding on Fathers' Involvement in
Their Children's Treatment After Domestic Violence
5. Einat Peled and Guy Peel: A Conceptual Framework for Intervening in the Parenting of Men Who Batter
6. Katreena L. Scott, Karen J. Francis, Claire V. Crooks, Michelle Paddon, and David A. Wolfe: Guidelines for Intervention With Abusive
Fathers
7. Juan Carlos Arean and Lonna Davis: Working With Fathers in Batterer Intervention Programs: Lessons From the Fathering After Violence Project
8. Ricardo Cardillo and Jerry Tello: Latino Fathers in Recovery
9. Cris M. Sullivan: Evaluating Parenting Programs for Men Who Batter:
Current Considerations and Controversies
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
Jeffrey L. Edleson is a Professor in the University of Minnesota School of Social Work and Director of the Minnesota Center Against Violence and Abuse. Over the past two decades Dr. Edleson has conducted intervention research at the Domestic Abuse Project in Minneapolis and served as a
consultant to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention and to the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges. An Associate Editor of the journal Violence Against Women, Dr. Edleson has published widely on domestic violence, groupwork, and program evaluation. Oliver J. Williams,
Ph.D., is the Executive Director of the Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American Community and Professor in the University of Minnesota School of Social Work. He has worked in the field of domestic violence for over twenty-five years as a battered women's advocate, batterer
intervention counselor, trainer, and researcher. He has also been involved in several national advisory committees and collaborated with the Family Violence Prevention Fund, National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, and other domestic violence and social service organizations.