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28 Hamline J. Pub. L. & Pol'y 1 (2006-2007)
Unto the Third Generation: A Call to End Child Abuse in the United States within 120 Years (Revised and Expanded)

handle is hein.journals/hplp28 and id is 13 raw text is: UNTO THE THIRD GENERATION:
A CALL TO END CHILD ABUSE IN THE UNITED STATES WITHIN
120 YEARS (REVISED AND EXPANDED)'
Victor I. Vieth2
This paper was originally published in volume 12 of the JOURNAL OF
AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA in 2006, Victor Vieth, Unto the Third
Generation: A Call to End Child Abuse in the United States within 120 Years,
12 J. AGGRESSION, MALTREATMENT & TRAUMA 5 (Spring 2006), and was also
published in the book Ending Child Abuse, ENDING CHILD ABUSE: NEW
EFFORTS IN PREVENTION, INVESTIGATION, AND TRAINING (Victor I. Vieth et al.
eds., Haworth Press, Inc. 1996). Article copies of the original version are
available from the Haworth Document delivery service by telephone at 1-800-
HAWORTH or by email to docdelivery@haworthpress. This revised draft
updates child protection professionals on the various reforms proposed in the
original draft and offers additional suggestions for significantly reducing, if not
ending, child abuse within three generations. This revised draft was made
possible, in part, by grant No. 20003-Cl-FX-K008 from the Office of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention, U.S. Department of Justice.  This
publication is based on the author's opinion and does not necessarily represent
the official position of the U.S. Department of Justice. This revised draft should
be cited: Victor I. Vieth, Unto the Third Generation: A Call to End Child Abuse
in the United States Within 120 Years (revised and expanded), 28 HAMLINE J.
PUB. L. & POL'Y 1 (2007).
2 Mr. Vieth graduated magna cum laude from Winona State University and
received his juris doctor from Hamline University School of Law. In law school,
he served as Editor-in-Chief of the law review and received the American
Jurisprudence Award for achievement in the study of Constitutional Law. From
1988-1997, he worked as a prosecutor in rural Minnesota where he gained
national recognition for his work on addressing child abuse in small
communities. In 1997, he became a senior attorney with the American
Prosecutors Research Institute's (APRI) National Center for Prosecution of
Child Abuse and, two years later, was appointed director of the program. In
2003, APRI appointed him director of the National Child Protection Training
Center at Winona State University. Today, he oversees both of these national
centers. He has authored numerous articles on the subject of child abuse and
domestic violence and lectures frequently around the country. He is a recipient
of distinguished alumnus awards from both Winona State University and
Hamline University School of Law, and the young lawyers division of the
American Bar Association named him one of 21 young lawyers leading us into

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