It Won't Happen to Me:
Substance Abuse-Related Violence Against Women for Anyone Concerned About The Issues

Module 1: Getting The Basics - Page 8 of 8

References

  1. Rennison, C.M., and Welchans, S. Intimate Partner Violence. Publication No. NCJ-178247. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, 2000.
  2. George, R.L. Counseling the Chemically Dependent. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1990.
  3. American Medical Association, "Substance Abuse," 1999.
  4. Coker, A.L.; Smith, P.H.; McKeown, R.E.; et al. Frequency and correlates of intimate partner violence by type: Physical, sexual, and psychological battering. American Journal of Public Health 2000, 90(4):553-559.
  5. "Making the Link Between Alcohol and Other Drugs and Domestic Violence." Plainville, CT: Connecticut Clearinghouse.
  6. Bennett, L., and Lawson, M. Barriers to cooperation between domestic-violence and substance-abuse programs. Families in Society 1994, 75(5):277.
  7. "Model Domestic Violence Policy for Counties." Albany: New York State Office for the Prevention of Domestic Violence, January 1998.
  8. Black, C. It Will Never Happen to Me. New York: Ballantine Books, 1981.
  9. "Approaches to Child Abuse and Domestic Violence: Working Together to Make Peace at Home." San Francisco: Family Violence Prevention Fund.
  10. Jaffe, P.G.; Wolfe, D.A.; and Wilson, S.K. Children of Battered Women. Developmental Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry Series 21. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1990.
  11. Wilson, K.J. When Violence Begins at Home. Salt Lake City: Publishers Press, 1997.
  12. "Research and Facts About Youth and Alcohol." Chicago: American Medical Association, November 2001.