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Purdue
University Press, 2005
Reviewed
by Kenneth Shapiro, Ph.D.
With this volume by one of the primary contributors
to the literature on the relation between
human violence and animal abuse, we now
have a considerable set of books on the
link -- Merz-Perez & Heide, Animal Cruelty;
Ascione & Arkow, Child Abuse, Animal
Abuse, and Domestic Violence, and Lockwood
& Ascione, Cruelty to Animals and Interpersonal
Violence.
Although grounded in a careful and critical
consideration of the existing empirical
studies, Asciones current effort is
well-written and accessible to the general
reader. The studies are complemented by
rich historical, literary, and case material.
A couple of methodological points that
come out of the discussion of the empirical
studies are worth noting here: the need
to use substantial or recurrent instances
of animal abuse when studying its link to
human violence; and the discrepancy between
parent- and self-reports, with the former
apparently under-reporting.
On the critical side, the definition Ascione
offers of animal abuse has been adopted
widely (p. 28). However, it has a problem
that needs to be addressed: it is not clear
that the requirement of intentionality in
the definition (
intentionally
causes unnecessary pain
) includes
neglectful behavior that results in pain
or suffering.
I found the section on available treatments
weak. The jump to animal assisted therapy
approaches in the treatment of animal abusers
is problematic and precautions should be
discussed. Existing published treatment
approaches are omitted: AniCare, AniCare
Child, and Strategic Humane Interventions
Program. These interventions have not been
validated, but that is true as well of the
other approaches that are included.
As a postscript, it is bothersome to this
reviewer that the book title (although not
the subtitle), is the same as that of a
recent book by Gene Myers.
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