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The Mission of the
Child Protection Division
The Child Protection Division administers
projects, programs, and initiatives related
to crimes against children and children’s
exposure to violence. It provides leadership
and funding in the areas of prevention,
intervention, treatment, and enforcement.
CPD promotes research and
effective policies and procedures to address
the problems of abused, neglected,
missing, and exploited children and
children who have been exposed to domestic
or community violence. CPD activities
include the following:
- Funding research and evaluation on
child victimization and exposure to
violence. One of OJJDP’s most extensive
research efforts directed at child
protection issues is the National Incidence
Studies of Missing, Abducted,
Runaway, and Thrownaway Children
(NISMART 2).1 As mandated by the
Missing Children’s Assistance Act, the
purpose of the studies is to determine,
for a given year, the actual number of
children reported missing, including
the number of children who are victims
of abduction by strangers, the
number who are the victims of parental
kidnapings, and the number who
are recovered.
Another CPD research project assessed
577 child abduction/murder
cases involving 621 victims and 419
offenders. Urban, suburban, and rural
law enforcement agencies (large and
small) from 44 States participated in the
assessment. The assessment obtained
information pertaining to victim and
offender characteristics and relationships,
offender motivation and post-offense
behavior, relationships between
evidentiary sites within a homicidal
event, and the law enforcement response
to these crimes. To enhance law
enforcement’s understanding of offenders who abduct and murder children
for sexual gratification, CPD also supports
the FBI in its efforts to interview
offenders incarcerated for abduction
murders of missing children.
OJJDP supports the work of the Crimes
against Children Research Center (CCRC),
located at the University of New Hampshire.
CCRC helps young victims of
crime by providing high quality research,
statistics, and education to
policymakers, law enforcement personnel,
child welfare practitioners, and the
public. The crimes of concern to CCRC
include physical and sexual abuse, abduction,
homicide, rape, assault, property
offenses, and the victimization of
children on the Internet.
CPD-supported evaluations of programs
and initiatives that focus on
collaboration and community partnerships,
such as the current evaluations
of Safe Kids/Safe Streets and Safe
Start,2 identify best practices and
effective approaches to preventing
and responding to child victimization
and exposure to violence. These evaluations
allow child protection practitioners
and professionals to learn
about what works and what does not
work and to build on the successful
efforts of their colleagues.
- Providing information, training, and
technical assistance. CPD is dedicated
to enhancing the Nation’s capacity to
prevent child victimization and respond
to victims, witnesses, and their families.
Through publications and training and
technical assistance programming, CPD
provides information about promising
programs, best practices, and emerging
trends to child protection and juvenile
justice professionals.
OJJDP publications, such as the Child
Abuse and Exploitation: Investigative
Techniques training manual, the Portable
Guides to Investigating Child
Abuse, and the Crimes Against Children
Bulletin series, address a number
of child protection issues. The child
abuse manual, which is used as part of
the curriculum of the Missing and Exploited
Children’s Training and Technical
Assistance Program, provides law enforcement officers and
other professionals with comprehensive
and up-to-date information about
a variety of topics related to child
abuse investigations. It offers investigators
practical advice and strategies
to guide them through the investigative
process and help them understand
applicable legal and evidentiary requirements.
The Portable Guides to
Investigating Child Abuse are a series
of compact booklets that complement
formal investigative training by providing
practical guidance in an easily accessible
format. The subjects of the
series’ current 13 guides include the
formation of multidisciplinary investigative
teams, recognition of injuries
caused by abuse, techniques for collecting
evidence and interviewing victims
and witnesses, and investigative
considerations in cases of child sexual
exploitation involving computers. The
Bulletins in OJJDP’s Crimes Against
Children series present the latest information
about child victimization, including
analyses of crime victimization
statistics, studies of child victims and
their special needs, and descriptions
of programs and approaches that address
these needs. These Bulletins
have covered topics such as kidnaping,
sexual abuse, and the reporting of
crimes against children to police or
other authorities. Individuals interested
in obtaining OJJDP publications
can call the Juvenile Justice Clearinghouse
at 800–638–8736 or access
OJJDP’s Web site (www.ojjdp.ncjrs.org).
OJJDP’s National Training and Technical
Assistance Center (NTTAC) collaborates
with approximately 60 training
and technical assistance providers to
ensure that its many constituencies
have access to appropriate services.
NTTAC’s Web site (www.nttac.org)
allows users to search directories of
training and technical assistance providers,
learn about upcoming training
events, locate training and technical
assistance resource materials, and link
to organizations and individuals with
expertise in particular areas of the juvenile
justice field. Users may also call
a toll-free number (800–830–4031) to
discuss their needs with a resource
facilitator.
The National Center for Children Exposed
to Violence (NCCEV) is a resource
center that provides training
and technical assistance and operates
a clearinghouse that collects and distributes
information on children’s exposure
to violence. Access to its services
and information is available
through its Web site (www.nccev.org)
and toll-free phone number (877–496–2238). NCCEV and several other CPD-supported
training and technical assistance
efforts are described later in
this Bulletin.
- Developing and demonstrating effective
child protection initiatives. As
authorized by the Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974,
the Missing Children’s Assistance Act
of 1984, and the Victims of Child Abuse
Act of 1990, CPD provides funding to
support a wide range of child protection
programs. Among the initiatives
supported by CPD is the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children
(NCMEC), a clearinghouse and
resource center that collects and distributes
data regarding missing and
exploited children, provides critical
services to families and law enforcement,
and operates a national toll-free
hotline (800–843–5678). NCMEC and
many other child protection initiatives
are described later in this Bulletin.
CPD works in partnership with State, local,
and tribal government agencies. It
works with other service providers, including
child welfare services, courts, domestic
violence services, early childhood
development services, medical services,
emergency response services, substance
abuse and mental health services, law
enforcement agencies, schools, family
support services, and social services.
CPD also collaborates with related Federal
and international agencies, public
officials, community residents, families,
service consumers, faith organizations,
businesses, and the media.
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Missing Children’s Assistance Act
The Missing Children’s Assistance Act1 provides the
legislative authority for several grants administered by the
Child Protection Division. The specific purposes for which
these grants can be used are outlined below.
The Act requires OJJDP to take the following actions:
- Facilitate effective coordination among all federally
funded programs relating to missing children.
- Establish and operate a national 24-hour toll-free telephone
line by which individuals may report information
regarding the location of any missing child, or other child
13 years of age or younger whose whereabouts are
unknown to her or his legal custodian, and request
information pertaining to procedures necessary to
reunite the child with her or his legal custodian.
- Establish and operate a national resource center and
clearinghouse to:
- Provide information to State and local governments,
public and private nonprofit agencies, and individuals.
- Coordinate public and private programs that locate,
recover, and reunite missing children with their legal
custodians.
- Disseminate nationally information about innovative
and model missing children’s programs, services,
and legislation.
- Provide training and technical assistance to law enforcement
agencies, State and local governments, elements
of the juvenile criminal justice systems, public and private
nonprofit agencies, and individuals in the prevention, investigation,
prosecution, and treatment of the case of a
missing or exploited child and in locating and recovering
missing children.
- Conduct national incidence studies to determine for a
given year the actual number of children reported missing
each year, the number of children who are victims of abduction
by strangers, the number of children who are the
victims of parental kidnapings, and the number of children
who are recovered each year.
- Provide State and local governments, public and private
nonprofit agencies, and individuals with information to
facilitate the lawful use of school records and birth certificates
to identify and locate missing children.
To accomplish these goals, the Act authorizes OJJDP to
make grants to and enter into contracts with public agencies
or nonprofit private organizations. OJJDP’s Child Protection
Division selects and oversees the programs receiving funds
allocated through the Act. CPD monitors these programs,
which, as mandated by the Act, are designed to achieve the
following goals:
- Educate parents, children, and community agencies and
organizations in ways to prevent the abduction and sexual
exploitation of children.
- Provide information to assist in the location and return of
missing children.
- Aid communities in the collection of materials that would
help identify missing children.
- Increase knowledge of and develop effective treatment pertaining
to the psychological consequencesfor both parents
and childrenof the abduction of a child, both during
the period of disappearance and after the child is recovered,
and the sexual exploitation of a missing child.
- Collect detailed data from selected States or localities on
the actual investigative practices used by law enforcement
agencies in missing children cases.
- Address the particular needs of missing children by minimizing
the negative impact of judicial and law enforcement
procedures on children who are victims of abuse or sexual
exploitation and by promoting the active participation of
children and their families in investigations of child abuse
or sexual exploitation.
- Address the needs of missing children and their families
following the recovery of these children.
- Reduce the likelihood that individuals under 18 years of
age will be removed without consent from the control
of their legal custodians.
- Establish or operate statewide clearinghouses to assist in
locating and recovering missing children.
1 42 U.S.C. §§ 5771–5780. |
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Victims of Child Abuse Act of 1990
The Victims of Child Abuse Act of 19901 authorizes grants administered by the
Child Protection Division and mandates the specific purposes for which the grants
are to be used. These purposes are described below.
The Act requires OJJDP to establish a children’s advocacy program to accomplish
the following goals:
- Focus attention on child victims by assisting communities in developing child-focused,
community-oriented, facility-based programs designed to improve the
resources available to children and families.
- Provide support for nonoffending family members.2
- Enhance coordination between community agencies and professionals involved
in the intervention, prevention, prosecution, and investigation systems that respond
to child abuse cases.
- Train physicians and other health care and mental health care professionals in
the multidisciplinary approach to child abuse so that trained medical personnel
will be available to provide medical support to community agencies and professionals
involved in the intervention, prevention, prosecution, and investigation
systems that respond to child abuse cases.
The Act also requires OJJDP to make grants for the following purposes:
- To develop and implement multidisciplinary child abuse investigation and
prosecution programs.
- To provide training and technical assistance to attorneys and others instrumental
to the criminal prosecution of child abuse cases in State or Federal courts,
for the purpose of improving the quality of criminal prosecution of such cases.
- To expand the Court Appointed Special Advocate initiative.
- To provide training and technical assistance to judicial personnel and attorneys,
particularly personnel and practitioners in juvenile and family courts, and to facilitate
administrative reform in juvenile and family courts.
- To develop one or more model training and technical assistance programs to
improve the judicial system’s handling of child abuse and neglect cases.
- To establish programs, developed by State courts or judicial administrators, that
provide or contract for the implementation of training and technical assistance
to judicial personnel and attorneys in juvenile and family courts and administrative
reform in juvenile and family courts.
1 42 U.S.C. §§ 13001–13004, §§ 13011–13014, §§ 13021–13024.
2 The term “nonoffending family member” means a member of the family of a victim of child abuse other than a member who has been convicted or accused of committing an act of child abuse. |
1 NISMART 2 is the second national study to measure the incidence of each category of missing children.
The first study, originally known by the acronym
NISMART (now known as NISMART 1), was conducted
in 1988 with results published in 1990. A more detailed
discussion of NISMART 2 can be found in Hanson, L.,
2000, Second Comprehensive Study of Missing Children,
Bulletin, Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice,
Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention.
2 See sections Safe Kids/Safe Streets and Safe Start for descriptions of these programs.
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| Keeping Children Safe: OJJDP’s Child Protection Division |
Juvenile
Justice Bulletin March 2001 |
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