Most people see aggression between siblings as an unavoidable, normal and ultimately harmless aspect of child development, yet it can often cause social adjustment and behavioral problems, some of which may be severe and even precursors to other forms of violence. This volume addresses a significant void in family studies and child development literature by providing an empirically based guide to the causes, assessment and treatment of sibling aggression. Caspi considers both extreme (severe physical and sexual abuse) and lesser (competition and antagonism) forms of aggression and provides a step-by-step treatment program for five family dynamics that commonly exacerbate sibling aggression. Treatment is based on task-centered and family systems models and bolstered by case studies. Key features: oFills the void in the ""emerging frontier"" of sibling violence oAddresses both severe and lesser forms of aggression oIncludes step-by-step assessment and treatment procedures oOffers case studies oExamines cross-cultural factors in sibling violence as well as abuse of disabled siblings