Read Children Who Kill: Profiles of Pre-Teen and Teenage Killers Online
Authors: Carol Anne Davis
Tags: #True Crime, #General, #Murder
But more and more people are turning to positive parenting. In 2001, the Open School Network – in partnership with Save The Children – produced a video called
We
Can
Work
It
Out,
subtitled
Parenting
With
Confidence.
The video is a before and after look at children who were parented with criticism then parented with praise.
During the criticism-based parenting, the children behaved exactly as the adults did. That is, if the parent shouted then the child shouted. If the parent pointed aggressively then the child pointed aggressively. The segment was called Copy Cats and explained how ‘much of our own behaviour determines the behaviour of our children.’
The parents then went on a parenting course and began to praise the good things that their children did rather than concentrating on the negative. The result was happier parents and more responsive children. Even parents with autistic children were helped as clinicians showed how to make a bedroom a pleasant place for an autistic child who had previously been very distressed when left in his room.
The video showed that children mainly felt fear
when a parent was angry and that the child learned little or nothing from the verbal or physical assault. But when parents acknowledged their children’s good behaviour – even the little things – the entire family became happier.
Parents on such positive parenting courses find that they get results when they are loving and give praise – not when they shout and criticise and hit.
Slowly, the world is becoming aware that corporal punishment by parents promotes violence and constitutes an assault. Sweden was one of the first to ban smacking, doing so in 1979. They’ve subsequently seen impressive reductions in youth convictions for theft and for alcohol abuse. At the moment, over fifty children a year die in Britain at their parent’s hands and more than three thousand children a year die in America at their parents’ hands – but Sweden has only had one such death in the past seven years.
In 1983 Finland followed, as did Norway in 1987 and Austria in 1989. The nineties saw further strides towards abolition with Cyprus banning all corporal punishment in 1994, Latvia in 1998 and Croatia in 1999. Germany followed in 2000, for their research showed a clear link between hitting a child (which included even light smacking) and later adult violence. Italy, South Africa and Belgium have also made anti-corporal punishment statements that have yet to be
confirmed in legislation. Sadly, both America and Britain still take a punitive stance.
Gavin de Becker, the survivor of a violent home, went on to establish a forty-six member agency which specialises in predicting violence. He has written that it is crucial that we stop mistreating children and view them ‘not as temporary visitors who will someday grow into citizens, but as fully fledged, fully contributing, fully entitled members of our society just as they are right now.’
Murray Strauss an expert on family violence has said ‘I want to see a national effort to help people avoid using physical punishment… 99% of the physical punishment that goes on, parents don’t want to hit their kids. They just feel it’s necessary for the child’s own good.’ He adds that most of these parents haven’t even considered alternative methodologies.
Strauss explains that when Sweden introduced a complete ban on smacking in 1979, three quarters of the population were against it. Nowadays, three quarters of Sweden’s population are in favour of the ban.
But we don’t have to wait for a change in the law before we create a non violent future. Adults who dare to recognise how their parents damaged them can avoid making the same mistakes.
Dorothy Rowe has written that though we may not be able to forgive such parents we can pity them ‘just
as we can pity the child we once were, and so remember our past with sadness and mourning. Those of us who suffered in childhood, and most of us did, can never again live in total bliss, but it is better to live freely with sadness than to trap ourselves in denial and depression.’
Sadly, at the moment such depression is rife. More than seven thousand people in the UK commit suicide each year. That is, someone kills themselves every seventy-nine minutes. And one in four people will be deemed mentally ill at any one time. Depression is now so common that it often goes unremarked and we are becoming a Prozac nation. The UK anti-depressant market is valued at 600 million pounds, the second largest in the world. It’s no accident that both child abuse and subsequent adult depression are on the rise.
Paul Mones dedicates his book
When
A
Child
Kills
‘to all the children who suffer silently at the hands of their parents.’ He especially thanks those children he interviewed who have to read his words from the confines of their dimly lit cells.
Most of these children will eventually be freed and have their first chance of happiness – assuming they aren’t killed by enraged members of the public. Ironically these members of the public will make no connection between their own humiliating childhoods and their current aggressive stance. So misery is passed on from generation to generation, for as the philosopher Santayana said ‘those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.’
Childline – a 24 hour free helpline that any child in distress can call.
Tel: 0800 1111
National Society For The Prevention Of Cruelty To Children – a 24 hour free helpline that anyone who fears a child is being hurt can call. Tel: 0808 800 5000
Children Are Unbeatable! Alliance, 94 White Lion Street, London N1 9PF – an alliance of organisations and individuals seeking legal reform to give children the same protection as adults under the law on assault. They also promote positive, non-violent discipline. For a membership form, send an SAE marked ‘Please Send Membership Details.’
EPOCH, 77 Holloway Road, London, N7 8JZ. For a free copy of the leaflet
The
Anti-Smacking
Guide
To
Good
Behaviour
by Penelope Leach, send an SAE marked ‘Penelope Leach Leaflet.’
Kidscape, 2 Grosvenor Gardens, London, SW1W 0DH. For a free copy of the leaflet
Why
My
Child?
which helps parents deal with the sexual abuse of their child, send a large SAE marked ‘Why My Child?’
Banished
Knowledge:
Facing
Childhood
Injury
by Alice Miller (Virago, 1990)
The
Successful
Self
by
Dorothy Rowe (Harper Collins, 1993)
Toxic
Parents
by Dr Susan Forward (Bantam Press, 1990)
The
Gift
Of
Fear
by Gavin de Becker (Bloomsbury, 1997)
Bell, David
Murder
Casebook:
Staffordshire
&
The
Black
Country
Countryside Books, 1996
Bellini, Jon
Child
’
s
Prey
Pinnacle Books, 2001
Britton, Paul
The
Jigsaw
Man
Corgi Books, 1998
Carnes, Patrick
Out
Of
The
Shadows:
Understanding
Sexual
Addiction
CompCare Publishers, 1983
de Becker, Gavin
The
Gift
Of
Fear
Bloomsbury, 1997
DeFelice, Jim
Kill
Grandma
For
Me
Pinnacle Books, 1998
Elliott, Michelle (edited)
Female
Sexual
Abuse
Of Children:
The
Ultimate
Taboo
Longman, 1993
Eskapa, Roy
Bizarre
Sex
Parrallel Books, 1995
Frasier, David K
Murder
Cases
Of
The
Twentieth
Century
Macfarland, 1996
Gekoski, Anna
Murder
By
Numbers
Andre Deutsch, 1999
Hale, Don
Town
Without
Pity
Century, 2002
Hare, Robert
Without
Conscience
Warner Books, 1994
Harrower, Julie
Applying
Psychology
To
Crime
Hodder & Stoughton, 1998
Holt, John
How
Children
Fail
Penguin Books, 1964
Jackson, David
Destroying
The
Baby
In
Themselves
Mushroom Publications, 1995
Jacobs, David (edited)
Sex
Sadists
Pinnacle Books, 2000
Jacobs, David (edited)
Too
Young
To
Die
Pinnacle Books, 2001
Jones, Frank
Murderous
Innocents
Headline, 1994
Kingsbury, Karen
Missy’s
Murder
Dell Publishing, 1991
Knox, Patricia
Troubled
Children:
A
Fresh
Look
At
School
Phobia
The Self Publishing Association, 1990
Lane, Brian
The
1995
Murder
Yearbook
Headline, 1994
Lasseter, Don (updated by)
Killer
Kids
Pinnacle Books, 1998
Lewis, Dorothy Otnow
Guilty
By
Reason
Of
Insanity
Arrow Books, 1999
Leyton, Elliott
Sole
Survivor
John Blake Publishing, 2001
Markman, Ronald & Bosco, Dominick
Alone
With
The
Devil
Futura, 1991
Miller, Hugh
Unquiet
Minds
Headline, 1995
Mones, Paul
When
A
Child
Kills:
Abused
Children
Who
Kill
Their
Parents
Pocket Books, 1991
Morris, Greggory W
The
Kids
Next
Door
William Morrow & Co, 1985
Morrison, Blake
As If
Granta Books, 1998
Newton, Michael
Killer
Kids
Loompanics Unlimited, 2000
Pantziarka, Pan
Lone
Wolf:
True
Stories
Of
Spree
Killers
Virgin Publishing, 2000
Ramsden, Mark & Randall, Housk
Radical
Desire
Serpent’s Tail, 2000
Reel, Guy & Perrusquia, Mark & Sullivan, Bartholomew
The
Blood
Of
Innocents
Pinnacle Books, 1995
Rowe, Dorothy
The
Successful
Self
Harper
Collins, 1993
Sagar, Ron Hull,
Hell
And
Fire:
The
Extraordinary
Story
Of
Bruce
Lee
Highgate Publications (Beverley), 1999
Sereny, Gitta
The
Invisible
Children:
Child
Prostitution
In
America,
Germany
And
Britain
Andre Deutsch, 1984
Sereny, Gitta
Cries
Unheard:
The
Story
Of
Mary
Bell
Macmillan, 1998
Sereny, Gitta
The
Case
Of
Mary
Bell
Pimlico, 1995
Schechter, Harold
Fiend
Pocket Books, 2000
Smith, David James
The
Sleep
Of
Reason
Century, 1994
Thomas, Mark
Every
Mother’s
Nightmare
Pan Books, 1993
Tutt, Norman (edited)
Violence
HMSO, 1976
Ward, Bernie
Families
Who
Kill
Pinnacle Books, 1993
Wilson, Colin
A
Plague
Of
Murder
Robinson, 1995
Wilson, Patrick
Children
Who kill
Michael Joseph, 1973
Be
A
Great
Mum
column in
Best,
19th March 2002. Article by Julia Goodwin on how to encourage children’s compassion.
Child
Abuse
leaflet Kidscape.
It
Is
Our
World
Too!
A
report on the lives of disabled children. For the UN General Assembly Special Session On Children. By Gerison Lansdown New York, September 2001.
Insider
magazine vol 2 no 5
Pets
In
Prison.
Article by Peter J Lewis.
Master
Detective,
February 2002. Article
Teenage
Rage
by Micky Cohen.
Observer
Magazine,
20th January 2002. Feature
Back
To
The
Beginning
by Jo Carlowe.
Prevent
Bullying:
A
Parents
Guide
leaflet Kidscape.
Protect
Children
From
Paedophiles
leaflet Kidscape.
Stop
Bullying
leaflet Kidscape.
You
Can
Beat
Bullying
leaflet Kidscape.
Children
Are
Unbeatable
www.childrenareunbeatable.org.uk
The
True
Crime
Library
http://crimelibrary.com
The
James
Bulger
Story
Broadcast in Britain on Channel Five 2000.
A
Killer
Among
Friends
Bonnie Raskins Production in association with Green Epstein. Broadcast courtesy of Lorimar Television.
The
Kids
That
Kill:
The
Killer
At
Thurston
High
Broadcast in Britain on Channel Four 2000. WGBH / Frontline Co-production with The Kirk Documentary Group.
Manhunt:
Catching
A
Child
Killer
Broadcast in Britain on ITV 2001. Ray Fitzwalter Associates.
Paedophile
Priests
Correspondent. Broadcast BBC2 17th March 2002.
Sexual
Abuse
Within
The
Family
Kilroy talk show. Broadcast BBC1 March 2002.
Unforgiven:
The
Boys
Who
Murdered
James
Bulger
Despatches investigation for Channel 4. Broadcast 2000.
We
Can
Work
It
Out:
Parenting
With
Confidence
An Open School Network Production in association with Save The Children. Produced 2001.