Vermont Bar Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 Winter 2015, Vol. 40, No. 4 | Page 30

The Children’s Corner disparate theories of human development coalesce, new approaches have emerged to help the children who are subjected to these traumas. Our new understandings are grouped under the related headings of “developmental trauma” and “polyvictimization.”6 They bring under one conceptual roof the cumulative effects of multiple, ongoing, continuous, persistent traumas that dominate the early years of some children’s lives. They force us to recognize that these cumulated effects form a single whole that is different in kind from the separate effects of its individual components. The new framework forces us to “de-silo” the multiple approaches we have used in the past to analyze and respond to the trauma affecting our young children. It allows us to mobilize all of the disciplines and resources available to us in the struggle to help children navigate the traumatic maze they face every day. Here are some characteristics of “trauma” and its effects in H