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CSLS Visiting Scholars Speaker Series: “The Effects of Disbelieving Children’s Disclosures of Abuse in the Justice System” & “Toward a Comparative Study Between the U.S. and Europe”

Thursday, December 5, 2024 @ 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

Carrie Leonetti 

Associate Professor, University of Auckland School of Law
 

“The Effects of Disbelieving Children’s Disclosures of Abuse in the Justice System”

In the California Family Code, the Legislature has declared that children have the right to be free from abuse in their homes and that courts making custody determinations should consider one parent’s history of abuse against either the child or their other parent in determining the child’s best interests. The Code requires courts to consider and give due weight to children’s views about their custody and visitation. The Code also establishes a presumption against physical custody of children for family violence perpetrators. Despite these clear statutory provisions, the California family law courts have a lengthy history of disregarding children’s disclosures of abuse and preferences to live with safe parents and forcing them into the custody of perpetrators. Professor Leonetti’s current research explores the consequences for children when their reports of abuse are minimized or disbelieved and their abusers are granted custody of them. 

Dario Melossi

Alma Mater Professor, University of Bologna
 

“Toward a Comparative Study Between the U.S. and Europe”

The number of migrants in prison is very high in most European penal systems today whereas it is quite low in the United States, and it has been that way for a long time. Criminological and historical reconstructions in the United States have advanced the thesis that the initial hostility toward migrants, expressed also in processes of criminalization, slowly turned into a process of assimilation and “whitening” of Southern and Eastern European migrants (however, things did not change that much when, more recently, non-European migrants became prevalent). Between the period of Reconstruction and the Great Migration, Americans of African origins became increasingly the target of processes of criminalization. Consequently, the number of migrants in prison became negligible, while the “overrepresentation” of African Americans became commonplace. Is there something to be learned today in Europe from such a story? Is there the danger that also in Europe there may be a possible shift from xenophobia to racism in processes of criminalization and prisonization? In this first very tentative analysis, we present data taken from the recent Italian migration context to start thinking through these issues. 

 
PLACE       In-Person at 2240 Piedmont Ave in the Philip Selznick Seminar Room.
TIME          3:30-5:00 p.m. in the Philip Selznick Seminar Room
                     – Dario Melossi: 3:30-4:15p.m.
                     – Carrie Leonetti: 4:15-5:00p.m.
 
 
If you require an accommodation for effective communication (ASL interpreting/CART captioning, alternative media formats, etc.) to fully participate in this event, please contact csls@law.berkeley.edu with as much advance notice as possible and at least 7-10 days in advance of the event.

Details

Date:
Thursday, December 5, 2024
Time:
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
Event Category:
Website:
https://csls.berkeley.edu/home

Venue

Philip Selznick Seminar Room
2240 Piedmont Ave
Berkeley, CA 94720-2150 United States
Phone:
510-642-4038

Organizer

Center for the Study of Law and Society
Email:
csls@law.berkeley.edu
Website:
View Organizer Website

Events are wheelchair accessible. For disability-related accommodations, contact the organizer of the event. Advance notice is kindly requested.

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