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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Developmental and social–ecological perspectives on children, political violence, and armed conflict

Author Affiliations
University of Notre Dame, SUNY Geneseo, Queen's University Belfast, Queens University
Published InDevelopment and Psychopathology
Year2016
Citations164

Abstract

An increasing number of researchers and policymakers have been moved to study and intervene in the lives of children affected by violent conflicts (Masten, 2014). According to a United Nations Children's Fund (2009) report, over 1 billion children under the age of 18 are growing up in regions where acts of political violence and armed conflict are, as Ladds and Cairns (1996, p. 15) put it, "a common occurrence-a fact of life." In recent years, the United Nations Children's Fund, advocacy and human rights groups, journalists, and researchers have drawn public attention to the high rates of child casualties in these regions, and to the plights of those children still caught in the crossfire. It has thus become clear that…
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