Abstract
This special issue of Child and Youth Care Forum includes four original research reports that build on the field’s knowledge of trauma stress exposure and PTSD in justice-involved
youth. Utilizing diverse methodologies, study authors report unique results investigating important questions related to screening
and assessment of justice-involved populations, the potential linkage between violence exposure and violence perpetration,
and the complex relationships between trauma exposure in childhood and specific problematic offending behaviors. Each article
includes specific clinical implications and recommendations for future research to provide useful information to juvenile
justice administrators, mental health professionals, and researchers involved in the care and management of trauma exposed
youth within the juvenile justice system. This introduction provides an overview of how empirical studies of the nature and
sequelae of traumatic stress exposure are currently a focus for research and services in the juvenile justice field, highlighting
how the articles in the Special Issue exemplify the progress to date, and promise for the future, of several lines of research
involving psychometrics, health and correctional services, and clinical epidemiology.
youth. Utilizing diverse methodologies, study authors report unique results investigating important questions related to screening
and assessment of justice-involved populations, the potential linkage between violence exposure and violence perpetration,
and the complex relationships between trauma exposure in childhood and specific problematic offending behaviors. Each article
includes specific clinical implications and recommendations for future research to provide useful information to juvenile
justice administrators, mental health professionals, and researchers involved in the care and management of trauma exposed
youth within the juvenile justice system. This introduction provides an overview of how empirical studies of the nature and
sequelae of traumatic stress exposure are currently a focus for research and services in the juvenile justice field, highlighting
how the articles in the Special Issue exemplify the progress to date, and promise for the future, of several lines of research
involving psychometrics, health and correctional services, and clinical epidemiology.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Editorial
- Pages 1-7
- DOI 10.1007/s10566-011-9149-3
- Authors
- Keith R. Cruise, Department of Psychology, Fordham University, New York City, NY, USA
- Julian D. Ford, Department of Psychiatry, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Connecticut Health Center Graduate School, Farmington, CT, USA
- Journal Child and Youth Care Forum
- Online ISSN 1573-3319
- Print ISSN 1053-1890