Social Work homework help. I will pay for the following article Children Victimology: Issues in the Criminal Justice System. The work is to be 7 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page. In the year 2001, more than three million reports related to child abuse were investigated by different child-related agencies, which indicated that enforcement agencies are informed of more than 2,000 children got missing during their process in the criminal justice system. (Gibson, pp. 23-25) Studies have indicated that behavioral and academic problems are usually confronted by victimized children of any crime or violence. Moreover, it has been reported that a significant percentage of adults involved in criminal activities were engaged with the criminal justice process in their childhood. Furthermore, parents have reported psychological, as well as, physical problems in children that interact with officials of the criminal justice system, which indicated that the criminal justice processs confrontation has adverse effects on children, and thus, effective steps should be taken to minimize the negative effects of the system. It is observed that children that encounter the criminal justice system are already vulnerable to trauma and threats, and such vulnerability results in a painful experience with the criminal justice system. It should be noted that the special needs of children were not considered during the designing and development of criminal justice system, and therefore, children confront a number of issues, such as child abuse, sex assaults, etc. In addition, researches have shown that a number of professionals of the criminal justice system confront problems while dealing with victimized children, and mostly, they do not have a significant solution to their problems. Children are often taken as flexible by officials of the criminal justice system, which results in ignorance of issues faced by children during the process. In this regard, a number of issues are faced by victimized children during their interaction with the criminal justice system, and services and program strategies should be planned in such a manner that may deal effectively with the suffering of child victimization. . .