Emily M. Douglas


Emily M. Douglas is a public policy scientist conducting research on child and family well-being, the child welfare system, fatal child maltreatment, domestic violence and divorced families, and corporal punishment. She is professor and head of the Department of Social Science and Policy Studies at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Massachusetts.

Education

Douglas studied at the University of Southern Maine and the Cleveland Institute of Music before graduating in 1995 with B.A. degree in psychology from Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. In 2002 she obtained her PhD in public policy from University of Massachusetts, Boston, with a dissertation on The Influence of Public Policy on Human Behavior: Is there an Effect of a New Hampshire Law Stating a Presumption for Joint Legal Custody on Father Involvement in Divorced Families?. After graduate school, she did a post-doc with Murray A. Straus at the Family Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire.

Domestic violence research

Fatal child maltreatment

Douglas has done extensive studies on child abuse leading to death and she has developed recommendation for social workers to better identify children at risk. Douglas has also studied the difficulty of distinguishing fatal child maltreatment from sudden infant death syndrome.

Corporal punishment

In an international research investigation that used an ecological study design, Douglas compared the rate of dating violence among university students in different countries and its relationship to receiving corporal punishment. She found that the rate of dating violence and injury was higher in the universities where more students had experienced corporal punishment as a child.

Male victims

Together with Denise Hines, Douglas has published a series of papers on male victims of domestic violence, including its prevalence and severity,, and men's post-violence helpseeking behavior and experiences.

Methods

With Murray A. Straus, Douglas has developed a widely used short form questionnaire to evaluate intimate partner violence. To be used in time limited situation, it is based on the longer Conflict Tactics Scales, the most commonly used survey instrument for domestic violence.

Selected publications

Books

Douglas EM, Hines DA, As I see it: Acting on risk factors to keep children safe. Worcester Telegram, 2015.