Research Catalog

Why kids kill parents : child abuse and adolescent homicide / Kathleen M. Heide.

Title
Why kids kill parents : child abuse and adolescent homicide / Kathleen M. Heide.
Author
Heide, Kathleen M.
Publication
Columbus : Ohio State University Press, c1992.

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TextRequest in advance HV 6542 .H45 1992Off-site

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Description
xix, 197 p. : ill.; 24 cm.
Summary
Kathleen Heide's sensitive and important account of family life gone wrong examines the shocking phenomenon of adolescents who kill their parents. Using harrowing case studies and a careful analysis of FBI data, Heide examines the motivations and backgrounds of these troubled adolescents, and what emerges is a tragic portrait--the adolescent murderer is almost always a terrified victim of severe child abuse, neglect, and dysfunctional parenting who kills out of desperation. Drawing upon her skill and experience as a scholar, clinician, and expert witness, Heide claims that a combination of five interconnected social problems creates the conditions for parricide: the youth is raised in a chemically dependent or otherwise dysfunctional family; the child is severely abused sexually, physically, and/or verbally; violence in the child's family escalates; the youth becomes increasingly vulnerable to stressors in the home environment; and the child has ready access to a firearm. Two of the five factors are crucial and require detailed discussion: the chemically dependent or otherwise dysfunctional family and the availability of a firearm. Why Kids Kill Parents concludes with an examination of types of intervention that are effective in treating both severely abused children and abused youth who kill their parents. According to Heide, most adolescent parricide offenders can be reintegrated into society through treatment, not imprisonment. Heide also proposes ways in which the media and the educational system can prevent child abuse and parricide by fostering functional families and mitigating the effects of dysfunctional ones. Why Kids Kill Parents is essential reading for all those who care about the nurturing of children and families in today's society, as well as for professionals in juvenile justice, criminology, law, mental health, education, and youth advocacy.
Subject
  • Adolescent
  • Adolescent psychotherapy > United States
  • Child Abuse
  • Domestic Violence
  • Dysfunctional families > United States
  • Family violence > United States
  • Homicide
  • Parricide > United States
  • Psychotherapy
  • Violence
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 181-192) and index.
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
Contents
Foreword / Hans Toch -- I. Parricide: Facts and Issues. 1. The Phenomenon of Parricide. 2. Child Maltreatment and Parricide. 3. Which Youths Kill. 4. Youths at Risk. 5. Legal and Psychological Issues -- II. Case Studies. 6. Assessment and Its Implications. 7. Peter Jones. 8. Scott Anders. 9. Patty Smith -- III. Implications, Practical Suggestions, and Future Directions. 10. Intervention after the Tragedy / Kathleen M. Heide, Don McCann and Eldra Solomon. 11. Society's Role -- Appendix: Analysis of Parricide Offenders by Juvenile versus Adult Status.
ISBN
  • 0814205631 (alk. paper)
  • 0814205739 (pbk. : alk. paper)
LCCN
^^^91032256^
OCLC
24504526
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library