Handbook on Sexual Violence (78 page)

Read Handbook on Sexual Violence Online

Authors: Jennifer Sandra.,Brown Walklate

BOOK: Handbook on Sexual Violence
8.87Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
  • Compound Securities (2010) ‘Home of the Mosquito’, available at http://
    www.compoundsecurity.co.uk/ (accessed 2 April 2010).

    Corby, B. (2000)
    Child Abuse
    (2nd edn). Buckingham, Philadelphia: Open University Press.

    Crittenden, P.M. (2008)
    Raising Parents. Attachment, parenting and child safety
    . Portland, Oregon: Willan Publishing.

    Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) (2010)
    Working Together to Safeguard Children
    . Nottingham: HM Government.

    Department for Education and Skills (DfES) (2005)
    Every Child Matters: Aims and Outcomes
    , available at http://
    www.everychildmatters.gov.uk/aims/ (accessed 27 January 2010).

    Department of Health (DoH) (2000)
    Assessing Children in Need and Their Families: practice guidance
    . London: The Stationery Office.

    Department of Health (DoH) (1995)
    Child Protection. Messages from Research
    . London: HMSO.

    Department of Health, Department for Education and Employment, Home Office, (DoH, DfEE, HO) (2000)
    Framework for the Assessment of Children in Need and Their Families
    . London: The Stationery Office.

    DiPietro, J.A. (2000) ‘Baby and the brain: advances in child development’,
    Annual Review of Public Health
    , 21: 455–71.

    Elliott, I.A. and Beech, A.R. (2009) ‘Understanding online child pornography use:

    Applying sexual offense theory to internet offenders’,
    Aggression and Violent Behavior
    , 14(3): 180–93.

    Finkelhor, D. (1986)
    A Sourcebook on Child Sexual Abuse
    . Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

    Franklin, B. (2002) ‘Children’s rights and media wrongs’, in B. Franklin (ed.) (2002)
    The New Handbook of Children’s Rights: comparative policy and practice
    . London: Routledge, pp. 15–42.

    Frosh, S. (2002) ‘Characteristics of sexual abusers’, in K.Wilson and A.James (eds)
    The Child Protection Handbook
    . London: Balliere Tindall, pp. 71–88.

    Frost, N. and Parton, N. (2009)
    Understanding Children’s Social Care
    . London: Sage.

    Furniss, T. (1991)
    The Multi-professional Handbook of Child Sexual Abuse
    . London: Routledge.

    Giddens, A. (1991)
    Modernity and Self Identity. Self and Society in the Late Modern Age
    .

    Cambridge: Polity Press.

    Goldson, B. (2002)
    Vulnerable Inside: Children in Secure and Penal Settings
    . London: Children’s Society.

    Goldson, B. and Muncie, J. (2006)
    Youth Crime and Justice
    . London: Sage.

    Haringey Local Safeguarding Children’s Board (LSCB) (2009)
    Baby Peter Serious Case Review
    , available at http://www.haringeylscb.org/index/news/babypeter_sc
    r.htm (accessed 2 April 2010).

    Hoffman, J., Ireland, T., and Widom, C. (1995) ‘Traditional socialization theories of violence. A critical examination’, in J. Archer (ed.)
    Male Violence
    . London: Routledge, pp. 289–303.

    Howe, D., Brandon, M., Hinings, D. and Schofield, G. (1999)
    Attachment Theory, Child Maltreatment and Family Support: A Practice and Assessment Model
    . Basingstoke: Macmillan.

    James, A. and James, A. (2004)
    Constructing Childhood, Theory, Policy and Social Practice
    .

    Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

    Johnson, S. and Petrie, S. (2004) ‘Child protection and risk-management: The death of Victoria Climbie´’,
    Journal of Social Policy
    , 33(2): 179–202.

    Kelly, L. (1988)
    Surviving Sexual Violence
    . Cambridge: Polity Press.

    Laming Report (2003)
    The Victoria Climbi´e Inquiry: report of an inquiry by Lord Laming
    , Cmnd. 5730. London: The Stationery Office.

    Leonard, P. (1997)
    Postmodern Welfare – Reconstructing an Emancipatory Project
    . London: Sage.

    Liberty (2010) ‘Help us stamp out the Mosquito’, available at http://www.liberty- human-rights.org.uk/issues/young-peoples-rights/stamp-out-the-mosquito.
    shtml (ac- cessed 3 April 2010).

    Lyon, C., Cobley, C., Petrie, S. and Reid, C. (2003)
    Child Abuse
    (3rd edn). Bristol: Family Law/Jordans.

    Mail Online (2010) ‘Natascha Kampusch: He put me inside the cellar for eight-and-a- half years, preserved alive like an Egyptian Pharaoh’, available at http:// www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/art
    icle-1245899 (accessed 17 March 2010).

    Marks, K. (2009)
    Lost Paradise: From Mutiny On The Bounty To A Modern-Day Legacy of Sexual Mayhem, The Dark Secrets of Pitcairn Island Revealed
    . New York: Free Press, Simon & Schuster.

    Mitchell, P. and Ziegler, F. (2007)
    Fundamentals of Development: the psychology of childhood
    .

    Hove: Sussex: Psychology Press.

    New York Times
    (2010) ‘Abuse scandals ripple across Europe’, available at http:// www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25church.html?src
    =me (accessed 28

    March 2010).

    Oetting, E.R. and Donnermeyer, J.F. (1998) ‘Primary socialization theory: the etiology of drug use and deviance’,
    Substance Use and Misuse
    , March, 33(4): 995–1026.

    Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (2009)
    Doing Better for Children
    . Paris: OECD.

    Papadopoulos, L. (2010)
    Sexualisation of Young People Review
    , available at http:// www.homeoffice.gov.uk/about-us/news/sexualisation-young-people.htm
    l (accessed 2

    March 2010).

    Parsons, T. and Bales, R. (2002 [1956])
    Family Socialization and Interaction Process
    .

    London: Routledge.

    Petrie, S. (2010) ‘The ‘‘commodification’’ of ‘‘children in need’’ in welfare markets: Implications for managers’,
    Social Work and Social Sciences Review
    , 14: 9–26.

    Petrie, S., Hughes, G. and Bennett, K. (2006)
    A Report for Blackpool Council on the Educational Achievement of Young Women at Key Stage 4
    . Liverpool: University of Liverpool Working Paper.

    Petrie, S. and Owen, S. (eds) (2005)
    Authentic Relationships in Group Care for Infants and Toddlers – Resources for Infant Educarers (RIE). Principles into Practices
    . London and Philadelphia: Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

    Pugh, G. (2007)
    London’s Forgotten Children
    . Briscombe Port, Stroud: Tempus. Qvortrup, J. (2004) ‘Editorial: The waiting child’,
    Childhood
    , 11(3): 267–73.

    Sereny, G. (1998)
    Cries Unheard. The Story of Mary Bell
    . Basingstoke: Macmillan.

    Sheridan, M.D. revised and updated by Marian Frost and Dr Ajay Sharma (2001)
    From Birth to Five Years, Children’s Developmental Progress
    . London: Routledge.

    Social Work Reform Board (2010) ‘The Government’s implementation plan for social work reform’, available at http://www.dcsf.
    gov.uk/swrb/ (accessed 2 April 2010).

    Sutton, C. (1994)
    Social Work, Community Work and Psychology
    . Leicester: British Psychological Society.

    Taylor, L. (2010) ‘Suffer the little children’,
    New Humanist
    , 125(1): 16–19.

    Thomas, T. (2009) ‘Sociology of childhood’, in T. Maynard and N. Thomas (eds) (2009)
    An Introduction to Early Childhood Studies
    (2nd edn). Los Angeles, London: Sage, pp. 33–46.

    Travis, A. (2010) ‘Yarl’s Wood detains baby for 100 days, damning report reveals’,
    The Guardian
    , 24 March 2010, avaliable at http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/mar/24/ yarls-
    wood-children-baby-report (accessed 30 March 2010).

    United Nation Children’s Fund (UNICEF) (2007)
    Child Poverty in Perspective: An overview of child well-being in rich countries
    . Florence: Innocenti Research Centre.

    United Nations General Assembly (2009)
    Report of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict
    . New York: UN.

    Walsh, K., Fortier, M. and DiLillo, D. (2010) ‘Adult coping with childhood sexual abuse:

    A theoretical and empirical review’,
    Aggression and Violent Behavior
    , 15: 1–13.

    Walker, P. and Wainwright, M. (2010) ‘Edlington brothers jailed for torture of two boys’,
    The Guardian
    , 22 January, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/jan/ 22/edlington-
    brothers-jailed-torture-boys (accessed 30 March 2010).

    Wilson, D.R. (2010) ‘Health consequences of childhood sexual abuse’,
    Perspectives in Psychiatric Care
    , 46(1): 56–64.

    Wilson, K., Ruch, G., Lymbery, M. and Cooper, A. (2008)
    Social Work. An introduction to Contemporary Practice
    . Harlow: Pearson Education.

    Woodiwiss, J. (2009)
    Contesting Stories of Childhood Sexual Abuse
    . Basingstoke: Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.

    Chapter 16

    Under their parents’ noses -- the online sexual solicitation of young people

    David Shannon

    Meet David Shannon

    David has been working as a researcher at the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention for four years. Prior to taking up his current position, he worked as Director of Studies for the undergraduate and postgraduate programmes at Stockholm University’s Department of Criminology, where he was also involved in researching different aspects of youth crime. Since moving to the National Council, David’s research focus has become more varied, and besides researching sexual offences against children, he has also participated in projects focused on discrimination in the criminal justice system and violence in schools. His work continues to involve researching and writing about youth crime, responses to youth crime and youth victimisation more generally.

    Introduction

    It’s a bit comical really because my parents were watching TV in the same room. I’m not sure how old the guy was, but at least twenty. I sent a couple of pictures of my face (nothing sexual) and he started writing things like how he wished I was there so he could fuck me in the arse and the mouth, and other similar ‘dirty talk’. It wasn’t exactly a turn on, especially with my parents in the same room.

    (girl aged 13)

    The quotation presented above is a description provided by a teenage girl of an online sexual contact she had with an adult at the age of 13. The reason for choosing to begin the chapter with this particular quotation is that it provides a very good illustration of the way in which the Internet has brought the

    possibility of sexual contacts with adults into children’s homes in a very new way. This is not the kind of thing you would expect a man in his twenties to be saying to a 13-year-old sitting in the same room as her parents – but the Internet makes it possible.

    Attempts by adults to develop relationships with children for the purposes of sexual exploitation and abuse are of course nothing new (e.g. Martens 1989; McAlinden 2006). However, with the rapid expansion in Internet use among young people from the mid to late 1990s, an awareness gradually developed among practitioners, researchers and policy-makers that this new medium provided a new and for the most part completely unmonitored arena for contacts between adults and children. The anonymity provided by Internet communications was recognised as creating favourable conditions for adults wishing to develop manipulative relationships with young people (e.g. Stanley 2001), and our knowledge of the ways in which adults are using the Internet for the purpose of sexually exploiting and abusing children has been slowly growing ever since.

    Research on the online sexual solicitation of children remains relatively limited, but it is continuously expanding. Research has focused on questions of the prevalence of online solicitation (e.g. Finkelhor
    et al
    . 2000; Wolak
    et al
    . 2006; Bra˚ 2007), on risk factors for exposure to online sexual contacts (e.g. Mitchell
    et al
    . 2001), on the modus operandi of adults who use the Internet to establish sexual contacts with children (e.g. Gallagher
    et al
    . 2006; Alvin Malesky Jr. 2007), on the content of online sexual contacts (e.g. O’Connell 2003; O’Connell
    et al
    . 2004), and on the methods employed by adults to persuade children to meet them offline for the purposes of sexual exploitation and abuse (e.g. Wolak
    et al
    . 2004a; Shannon 2008).

    Central findings to date show that children experience online sexual contacts both from adults and from other young people. They also show that

    exposure to such contacts appears to be less widespread among younger children, but becomes increasingly common as children approach and enter their teenage years. Girls are exposed to online sexual solicitation to a much greater extent than boys, and boys and men are responsible for the vast majority of the online contacts described in the literature (e.g. Finkelhor
    et al
    .

Other books

Bedelia by Vera Caspary
Wayward Winds by Michael Phillips
Vexed by a Viscount by Erin Knightley
Leela's Book by Albinia, Alice
F Paul Wilson - LaNague 02 by Wheels Within Wheels (v5.0)
Taming Theresa by Melinda Peters
02. Riders of the Winds by Jack L. Chalker