"The Science and Statistics Behind Spanking Suggest That Laws Allowing Corporal Punishment are in the Best Interests of the Child"
Jason M. Fuller
Akron Law Review, 2009
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid= ... y=CMi8uIQG
Can anyone help dissect this?
Here are some excerpts:
Table of Contents wrote:I. Introduction..................................................................... 244
II. Background: The Movement to Gradually Eliminate Spanking in the Home...................249
A. The Movement to Change Public Opinion ................... 249
B. How Foreign Governments Are Gradually Outlawing Corporal Punishment ......................... 252
C. The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child Is Being Used to Abolish Spanking Worldwide ............. 256
D. America Is Following the Incremental Path that Leads to a Ban on Spanking in the Home ................... 259
III. The Problems Associated with Anti-Spanking Laws: A Look at the First Country to Ban All Physical Discipline......264
A. A Little Less Spanking, A Lot More Child Abuse ....... 266
B. A Little Less Spanking, A Lot More Teen Violence .... 271
C. Reflecting on Sweden's Spanking Ban: More Harm than Good ................................ 274
IV. Misleading Research and Media Coverage Virtually Monopolize the Spanking Debate ................277
A. The Research "Should Be Closely Examined for Evidence of Bias". .......................278
B. "The Methodological Flaws in the Cited Evidence Are of Concern" ............................... 281
C. "Avoid the Insidious Evils of Propaganda Favoring Particular Points of View" .......................... 292
D. "Risk... Alone Is Insufficient to Support Regulation" Because "It Is Always a Doubtful Course, to Argue Against the Use or Existence of a Power, from the Possibility of Its Abuse" ... 305
V. The Most Comprehensive Child Development Study Validates the Body of Research that Suggests Spanking Is Harmless ......306
A. Sound Research Indicates that Physical Discipline Does Not Inherently Harm Children ............309
B. Sound Research Indicates that Children with the Highest Optimism, Academic Achievement, and Self-Esteem Have Been Spanked...311
V I. Conclusion ...............................315
Introduction wrote:In 2005, a group of thirteen-year-old Swedish boys began terrorizing a family by threatening to kill the family's son, forcing the mother's car off the road and ripping open her rear door, publicly humiliating them, damaging and stealing their property, emptying and sabotaging their mailbox, brandishing planks at them, and surrounding them with weapons.' Over the next two years, the harassment became so intolerable that the father shot at the group of teens, killing one.
Were such a killing to occur in the U.S., the popular reaction would have been, "How can we prevent this from happening again?" In Sweden, however, youth violence and aggression has gotten so out-of-control that the reaction was, "Shoot another [one]." Sadly, many policymakers fail to realize how Swedish laws have contributed to growing youth violence, and consequently, to public resentment of Swedish youths.
In 1979, Sweden started an international trend by becoming the first country to ban spanking.
Conclusion wrote:Today, six out of ten Swedish children feel vulnerable at school, and just as many have been victims of youth violence. This is consistent with the dramatic rise in youth violence since Sweden banned spanking. The very spanking ban that was supposed to help them seems to have betrayed them.
And yet, we don't talk about how many parents either do not or cannot maintain control when physical discipline is banned. We don't talk about how such parents tend to resort to helpless, aggressive parenting techniques, and even child abuse. Therefore, we don't talk about how children "are no more protected [under spanking bans] than they were before."
Similarly, we don't say how the most friendly, stable, and competent children come from "authoritative" families-families that raise children with both love and firm guidance. We don't say how the most sound, comprehensive research suggests that firm guidance includes at least occasional spanking. And we don't say how such physical discipline has shown no harmful effects on children.
Because we suppress information about spanking, many children forced to grow up without it are suffering because of their violent peers, helpless parents, and even their own misbehavior. They are suffering because of increased aggression, defiance, and antisocial behavior-the very vices that spanking appears to reduce better than any other
discipline method.
Because we suppress information about spanking, policymakers are insisting that children who learn best through physical discipline must mature only through mental discipline.415 This is like trying to force visual learners to become auditory learners. There are just too many variables from child to child, discipline method to discipline method, and misbehavior to misbehavior to justify a spanking ban. It is not in the child's best interests to require a one-size-fits-all discipline method, or to determine that a valuable discipline method like spanking cannot suit any child.
It is in the child's best interests to allow him to learn from a discipline method that he understands. It is in his best interests to allow his parents to take an active and loving role in his maturation, without making them feel helpless to control his misbehavior. Therefore, it is in the best interests of the child, the family, and ultimately society to allow corporal punishment. Anything less risks leaving our country feeling as helpless as those marching on the streets of Sweden.