A powerful, data-driven investigation into how race, geography, and community shape the reporting and response to child abuse in Alabama.
Child Abuse in the Deep South is a groundbreaking examination of how child maltreatment is reported, confirmed, and understood in Alabama—a state shaped by deep historical, racial, and geographic divides. Drawing on over 7,000 case reports, this study reveals how factors such as race, community size, and regional culture influence the identification and handling of abuse cases. With a focus on both rural and urban settings, the book uncovers patterns of systemic bias, underreporting, and institutional response that have long gone unaddressed.
Through rigorous data analysis and a compassionate lens, this work challenges assumptions about child welfare in the American South and offers critical insights for policymakers, social workers, legal professionals, and scholars. Child Abuse in the Deep South is both a call to action and a vital resource for understanding the intersection of social justice, public policy, and child protection in one of the nation’s most complex regions.
Child Abuse in the Deep South provides a quantitative benchmark that investigators and policy-makers will find invaluable on the path to defining at-risk populations, effective interventions, and treatments.
Lee W. Badger received her master's degree from the University of Alabama School of Social Work and her Ph.D. in educational psychology/research in the University of Alabama College of Education. Badger's research interests and publications have focused on mental health issues in rural populations.
Nicholas A. Green received his M.D. degree in 1956 from the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University in North Carolina. Prior to joining the university faculty in 1983, Dr. Green was in private practice in Massachusetts and was director of psychiatry at the Framingham Youth Guidance Center of the Greater Framingham Mental Health Association.
L. Ralph Jones received his M.D. degree in 1968 from the Kansas University School of Medicine. He is co-editor, with Richard R. Parlour, M.D., of Psychiatric Services for Underserved Populations.
Julia A. Hartman received her master's degree in medical anthropology from the University of South Florida.