Second Comprehensive Study of Missing Children


Book Description

The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention of the U.S. Department of Justice presents the full text of an article entitled "Second Comprehensive Study of Missing Children," by Louise Hanson. The article discusses studies of the office on the scope of the problem of missing children in the United States. The National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children highlights data on the incidence of missing children in eight categories, including nonfamily and family abduction, missing due to injury, sexually assaulted, custodial interference, and lost and involuntarily missing, among others.










Missing Children


Book Description

Child abduction is the most widespread form of child victimization studied. In 1992 alone, a total of 27,553 cases of missing children were reported in New York State through the Missing Children Register. The majority of missing children cases involved suspected runaways. Abduction cases accounted for one percent of the total report; those committed by family members comprised the most frequent form of abduction (as opposed to abduction by strangers). In addition, 88 percent of the children reported missing were age 13 or older, 60 percent were girls, and 58 percent were white. Child abduction is a serious socio-economic problem. Until now there has been no text that addresses the incidence, psychological dimensions, and explanatory models of child abductions. This book fills a need by focusing on variables that assist in confronting and preventing child abductions, including teacher training, public education and awareness, psychotherapeutic techniques for families and friends of abducted children as well as the children themselves.




Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children in America


Book Description

Estimates the incidence of 5 categories of children, those who were: abducted by family members; abducted by non-family members; runaways; thrownaways; and missing because they had gotten lost or injured, or for some other reason. Data was collected from 6 separate sources: household survey; juvenile facilities survey; returned runaway study; police records study; FBI data reanalysis; and community professionals study. Charts, tables and graphs.




National Estimates of Children Missing Involuntarily Or for Benign Reasons


Book Description

This Bulletin provides information on the numbers and characteristics of two groups of children not frequently recognized in the literature on missing children: those involuntarily missing because they were lost, injured, or stranded and those missing for benign reasons. The estimates reported in this Bulletin are derived from two components of the Second National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children (NISMART-2): the National Household Survey of Adult Caretakers and the National Household Survey of Youth. These surveys were conducted during 1999 and reflect the experiences of children in the United States over a 12-month period. Because the vast majority of cases were concentrated in 1999, the annual period the Bulletin refers to is 1999.