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Poverty in African American Minority Neighborhoods

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Child abuse is defined as ways of treating a child that are harmful or morally wrong. (Richards 12) Child abuse is caused by so many things and usually starts with something de-menial or small. Like a snowball, the problem gets bigger as time goes on, if you do not stop it. Child abuse happens everywhere, in every neighborhood, ethnicity/racial, and religion. It is worldwide. One of the main factors of child abuse is where they live. Do they live in poverty or not? Poverty is such a broad term; when most people think of poverty, they think of the kids they see on TV. These children are usually from a third world country where there are programs set up to help feed the starving. Poverty is defined by Charles Booth, in 1886, as “very …show more content…

The “estimated overlap of domestic violence and child abuse is 30 to 50 percent” of all cases (Henderson 321). As the child grows older and sees the violence in their household there is a possibility that the child will think that it is acceptable. Over half of children abused in Palm Beach County are younger than six years of age. “44% of the abused children were African American, nearly 52% of the neglected or abused children were younger than 6 [years old], and more than half of those were infants” (Wolford 1). African American children are often portrayed as children who are abused. Many times it is shown on TV or movies or in novels. People are vulnerable to information that they see every day; yet, this information may or may not be 100 % accurate. “In 1982 black children were 22 % of all child maltreatment reports. In 1984 black children were 20.8 % of all Child Protective Services cases” (Hampton 4). Many studies have been conducted to prove that there is a significant difference in child abuse among the multiple social classes. For example, “Lauderdale, Valiunas, and Anderson wrote in 1980 that the annual rates for Texas in 1975-1977 whites, African Americans and Mexicans without social class, African Americans were the highest for all forms of maltreatment, followed Mexicans, and lastly, whites.” Later in 1983, “Spearly and Lauderdale extended the research by

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