Dr Divna Haslam and Professor Ben Mathews, from QUT School of Law, said the time was right for legislation to ban corporal punishment.

Dr Haslam led the first national Australian study of prevalence and attitudes to corporal punishment which analysed data regarding corporal punishment contained in the Australian Child Maltreatment Study. The study is published in the Australian Journal for Social Policy.


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โ€œCorporal punishment is defined here as the use of physical force to cause pain, but not injury, for the purposes of behavioural discipline or correction,โ€ Dr Haslam said.

โ€œWe asked 8503 Australians aged 16 and over if an adult had ever smacked or physically punished them to discipline them for misbehaviour and six in 10 people said โ€˜yesโ€™.


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โ€œDecades of research has shown corporal punishment is associated with a range of adverse outcomes including increased aggression, both externalising and internalising behaviour problems, decreases in cognitive ability, mental health problems, and even neurological changes.โ€

Dr Haslam said only a quarter (26 per cent) of those surveyed believed corporal punishment was necessary in raising a child.

โ€œOf note, Australians aged under 45 are much less likely to view corporal punishment as necessary than those over 45, โ€ she said.

โ€œThis suggests the Australian community may be receptive to attempts for law reform in this area.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s also evidence suggesting the use of corporal punishment may be declining. Younger parents were only a tenth as likely to use physical punishment as the oldest parents.โ€

Dr Haslam said corporal punishment by parents was lawful in Australia because legislation and common law in all states and territories permitted parents to use โ€œreasonableโ€ physical force for the purposes of discipline or punishment.

โ€œA study of eight countries that instituted legal bans against corporal punishment found rates of corporal punishment and beliefs about its necessity decreased in only three of the eight countries following legislative change,โ€ she said.

โ€œHowever, the countries with greater positive change had a public health strategy that raised awareness about corporal punishmentโ€™s adverse effects and provided parenting education on alternative strategies to respond to childrenโ€™s behaviour.โ€

Dr Haslam and colleagues argue Australia needs legal change to create a new social norm prohibiting violence against children, combined with a public health strategy promoting appropriate responses to challenging child behaviours.

The study also showed:

  • Overall, half of Australian parents (53.7 per cent) have used corporal punishment, with younger parents being much less likely to use it than older parents.
  • Men are more likely to believe corporal punishment is necessary than women.
  • Mothers and fathers were equally likely to use corporal punishment.
  • Parents are slightly more likely to believe corporal punishment is necessary than non-parents (30.9 per cent compared to 19 per cent)
  • People who had experienced corporal punishment as children were more likely to use corporal punishment and believe it was necessary, (60.4 per cent versus 53.7 per cent) suggesting intergenerational patterns.

Dr Haslam said the results were consistent with a steady decline in the use of corporal punishment over time, with fewer younger parents using it and believing it was necessary compared with older parents.

โ€œItโ€™s very reassuring to see younger parents are less likely to use physical discipline.

โ€œCorporal punishment is associated with harm and it has no long-term benefits and we know there are effective non-violent alternatives.

โ€œThis study has some good news regarding beliefs about corporal punishment, although an area of concern is that 6 in 10 young people aged 16-24 reported receiving physical discipline in childhood.โ€

IMAGE CREDIT: Caleb Woods on Unsplash


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