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Afraid of Jail? Buy an Upgrade [TheMarshallProject.org]

Alan Wurtzel met Carole Markin on Match.com in 2010. On their first date, he took her to coffee. After their second date, he walked Markin to her door, followed her inside and, she said, forced her to perform oral sex. Wurtzel later claimed the act was consensual, but in 2011 he pleaded no contest to sexual battery and was sentenced to a year in jail. His victim was disappointed in the short sentence, but she still believed a measure of justice would be served with her assailant locked...

Child Welfare Involvement Linked to Increased Severity of Punishment for Youth, Study Finds [ChronicleOfSocialChange.org]

Among youth who come into contact with the juvenile justice system, researchers determined that those who were also involved with the child welfare system were as much as 11 times more likely to be placed in a group home over those with no child welfare involvement. Utilizing Los Angeles County administrative data, a study titled “Juvenile justice sentencing: Do gender and child welfare involvement matter?” and published in the Children and Youth Services Review examined linkages between...

Should K-8 schools give students an ACE survey?

Perhaps you read this well-reported and -written article by Julie Wootton on MagicValley.com , published by the Times-News in Twin Falls, Idaho, about how Heritage Academy, a K-8 public school in nearby Jerome, gave the 10-question ACE survey to its students. The older students took the original 10-question ACE survey, while younger students were given a modified version of the sex abuse question. The brouhaha erupted after a couple of students asked their mother to explain oral and anal...

Harvard researchers discovered the one thing everyone needs for happier, healthier lives [WashingtonPost.com]

My grandmother once told me this little story that stuck with me. One afternoon at a doctor’s appointment, her doctor moved her large purse to another chair and remarked how heavy it was. “You must be very rich,” he said to her. “I am,” she said affirmatively. My grandparents lived modestly, still in the narrow two-bedroom rowhouse where she’d raised her family since her husband returned from World War II. They didn’t travel, eat lavish meals or shop at the finest department stores. Neither...

Heartland Alliance's Social Impact Research Center Releases Data on the Intersection of Poverty, Violence, and Trauma

On Wednesday, March 15th, the Social IMPACT Research Center will release its annual report on poverty in Illinois. This year's report will look at the relationship between trauma, poverty and violence, and the role they play in Illinois. Cycle of Risk: The Intersection of Poverty, Violence, And Trauma , will examine how poverty and violence often intersect, feed one another, and share root causes, and the resulting trauma directly feeds back into the cycle. We invite you to visit our website...

Advancing the Action on Adversity Science and Race

Last weekend, I had the pleasure of attending the Academy on Violence and Abuse Regional Summit in St. Louis. It was enjoyable listening to local health care providers use a trauma-informed lens to discuss medical care. As well as listening to internationally known experts on the seminal Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) Study. I also had the honor of sitting on a panel that showcased St. Louis based health care practices that are adapting ACEs Science into patient/consumer interactions...

The Science of Gratitude – How it Changes People, Relationships (and Brains!) and How to Make it Work For You [HeySigmund.com]

Gratitude – we’re all capable of it, but sometimes we need a little reminder, or a little convincing to practice it. There are many reasons to practice gratitude, but we are only recently discovering one of the big ones – its capacity to change and strengthen the brain in remarkably positive ways. Gratitude is powerful. It might not throw itself at our feet and demand our attention in a ‘why oh why won’t you notice me’ kind of way, but it’s powerful. Research has shown that gratitude can...

Muslim Americans Are United by Trump—and Divided by Race [TheAtlantic.com]

When weary Muslims gathered in Toronto in December for an annual retreat, marking the end of a tumultuous U.S. election year, they probably didn’t expect the event to turn into a referendum on racial tensions within the American Muslim community. But it did. One session was led by Hamza Yusuf, a well respected white scholar who co-founded Zaytuna College, which claims to be America’s first Muslim liberal-arts college. At the end, he was asked whether Muslims should work with groups like...

The Syrian Migrant Crisis You’ve Never Heard of—and Why It Matters Today [PSMag.com]

The ongoing political and legal controversy over President Donald Trump’s revised executive order banning visitors from six Muslim-majority countries is the latest flashpoint in what has become one of the great moral conundrums of our time: What to do about the refugees of the Syrian Civil War? Since 2011, the Syrian Civil War has forced some five million Syrians out of the country. And as millions flee and risk their lives trying to find a stable land, surrounding countries, Europe, and the...

The Complex Interplay of Adverse Childhood Experiences, Race, and Income

By Kristen S. Slack, Sarah A. Font, and Jennifer Jones TAKEN FROM REPORT: An extensive research base shows evidence of racial disparities in health outcomes, and a growing body of evidence points to associations between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and poor health. This study uses data from the 2011 and 2012 Wisconsin Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System surveys to identify the relative contributions of ACEs, race, and adult income to predicting three sets of adverse adult...

Do Staff Relationships Matter? How Can We Improve Them?

This month at Partner for Healing we are discussing work place relationships. Are they important? Research from Gallup shows us that employees rating of the social support they get at work correlates with how satisfied they are with their jobs.An article by Kyle D. Killian, Helping Till It Hurts? A Multimethod Study of Compassion Fatigue, Burnout, and Self-Care in Clinicians Working With Trauma Survivors (Traumatology Volume 14 Number 2 June 2008 32-44 © 2008 Sage Publications) describes...

Economically Diverse Neighborhoods Give Poor Black and Latino Youth a Leg Up [CityLab.com]

Since the sociologist William Julius Wilson examined increasing poverty in black urban neighborhoods in his groundbreaking 1987 book, The Truly Disadvantaged, researchers have avidly studied the effects of geography on low-income city residents. Recent research on a Denver public housing program adds to this body of work by offering conclusions about the benefits of neighborhood economic diversity for low-income black and Latino youth. George Galster, a professor of urban affairs at Wayne...

Building Democracy in ‘Trump Country’ [BillMoyers.com]

A lot of people don’t believe me when I tell them Letcher County, Kentucky, is one of the most open-minded places I’ve ever lived. I might not have believed it either, before I moved here a year ago. I’ve spent most of my life in cities and suburbs, and I arrived with all the assumptions you can imagine about Central Appalachia and the people who live here. But if you’ve been here, or to similar places, you know how wrong those assumptions can be. Yes, some people fly Confederate flags. One...

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