Sexual abuse is a complex and emotional public health issue that
impacts everyone – individuals, communities, institutions, and society as a
whole. Despite this reality, sexual abuse remains a difficult topic for open
discussion and the complexities of sexual abuse are often not reflected by
public opinion. This is understandable when we recognize that our perceptions
are often influenced by the way sexual abuse, sexual abusers, and survivors are
portrayed in films, on television, and in the popular media – too often a one
dimensional and sensationalized, rather than factual, presentation. If our goal
is to prevent sexual abuse and ensure there are no more victims, it is essential
that the public become engaged and educated about sexual abuse, those who
perpetrate sexual abuse, and strategies to prevent sexual abuse.
Studies have shown that reported offending has decreased for all
types of crimes over the past 20 years and this is also true for sexual
offending, both in the United States (Finklehor, 2004; Lauritsen & Rezey,
2013) and the United Kingdom (Crime
statistics for England and Wales, 2013/14). Research on sexual abuse within
the criminal justice and psychology fields has also vastly progressed over the
past 30 years (Wilson & Prescott, 2014; Marshall, 2011) and we now know
more about those who perpetrate sexual abuse, their motivations, etiology and rehabilitation
than ever before (ATSA, 2014; Wilson & Prescott, 2014; Carter, 2014). We
also have more clearly defined laws and evidence-based criminal justice
approaches for the management of individuals convicted of sexual crimes than
ever before (CSOM, 2008; Kemshall & McCartan, 2014), as well as a greater
understanding of innovative reintegration strategies that promote public safety,
including community-based strategies such as Circles of Support
& Accountability. We are even starting to see the traditional media
reporting on sexual abuse in a more balanced, realistic, and engaged manner.
Despite these positive changes towards greater community engagement
and understanding, improved victim services, and more effective treatment
models, the most common attitude of the general public continues to be that
nothing works for “sex offenders.” (McCartan, 2004, 2010, 2013; McCartan,
Kemshall & Hudson, 2012). This is the greater paradox within our field, as
well as criminology/criminal justice in general – public perceptions do not coincide
or reflect professional experiences, or what the research tells us about the
reality of the situation.
This divergence between public attitudes and understanding versus the
realities of sexual abuse is fuelled in part by myths created through
stereotyping, miscommunication, prejudice, active disengagement, and poor
professional interaction – all factors which speak to the need for greater
public engagement and understanding about sexual abuse in order to facilitate
prevention and safer communities. Public engagement is important for a number
of reasons, including;
·
Community and self-protection: By better
understanding the aetiology, behaviours, offence patterns, criminal justice
responses and treatment models related to sexually abusive behavior,
individuals are better prepared to protect themselves and others. Therefore
education and understanding is a self-defense mechanism, as well as an integral
component to creating a culture of non-acceptance of sexual abuse which
promotes prevention (e.g., bystander
intervention programmes).
·
Supporting appropriate responses to sexual abuse: The appropriate response to sexual abuse, like any crime or case of
neglect, is to report it to the appropriate authorities so that they can
respond to it. It is not to take the law into your own hands (McCartan, 2010;
Vigilante hunter case, Daily
mail, Independent;
Haas, 2010) or too ignore the issue. By better understanding what the reality
of sexual abuse is, what the authorities do (and why they do it in that way),
and how sexual offense specific treatment and management works, the public is better equipped to make informed
decisions, as opposed to uninformed ones.
·
Dispelling miscommunications and rectifying myths: Sexual abuse has a lot of associated myths, whether these are rape
myths, victim blaming, myths about who commits child sexual abuse, or the
impact of abuse depending on the gender/age/ethnicity/cognitive ability of the
offender or victim. These myths help no one and actually often compromise,
rather than promote, public safety. By greater engagement with individuals and communities,
through better education programmes and through more realistic media engagement,
we can dispel these myths. While this may be a difficult task due to many of
these myths being hardwired into our personal and cultural psyche, by
dispelling these myths we can facilitate recognition of sexual abuse for the
complex public health issue that it is and move forward towards a culture of
prevention.
·
Influencing public policy and agenda setting: Public opinion shapes governmental policy and practice, from emotionally
driven knee jerk responses to in-depth social change. This means that public
opinion is vital beyond a social dialogue as it feeds into legislative and
political agenda setting. A more engaged public results in a greater understanding
of the reality of sexual abuse and the complexities of responding to these
issues and this, in turn, leads us to a more informed and realistic
sociological debate. It also results in the public campaigning for evidence
based policies and laws that are both preventative and responsive, public
health oriented as well as criminal justice oriented, and forward thinking
rather than reactionary.
While the prevention of sexual abuse may feel like a never ending
task, we have come far over the past 30 years in not only our understanding of
sexual abuse, but in our support of survivors, management of perpetrators, and
prevention efforts. But our work is far from done and public engagement is key
to continuing forward – although the prevention of sexual abuse requires a
well-planned and comprehensive response founded on research, it is only through
education, collaboration, and the involvement of everyone – community members,
violence prevention professionals, victim advocates, law enforcement
professionals, treatment professionals, journalists, and policy makers – that
the prevention of sexual abuse can become a reality.
Interested in learning more about
public engagement? Then join us for a free event open to all - Understanding
Sexual Abuse & Sexual Assault: Causes, Consequences, and Prevention
- on Tuesday October 28th at the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego,
CA. Co-sponsored by ATSA, CALCASA, CCOSO, IVAT, and NSVRC.
Kieran McCartan, PhD & Katie Gotch, MA
References
Association
for the Treatment of Sexual Abuses (ATSA) (2014). Eight things everyone should know about sexual abuse and sexual
offending.
Beaverton, OR: Author.
Carter, A. (2014). Sex
Offending Treatment Programmes: The importance of Evidence based practice. In:
McCartan, K., ed. (2014) Responding to
Sexual Offending: Perceptions, Risk Management and Public Protection.
Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 111 - 126. ISBN 9781137358127
Center
for Sex Offender Management (CSOM) (2008). The comprehensive approach to sex offender management. Silver Spring, MD: Author.
Finkelhor,
D. & Jones, L.M. (2004). Explanations for the decline in child sexual abuse
cases. Juvenile Justice Bulletin, January
2004. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice
Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
Haas,
N.E. (2010). Public support for
vigilantism. Leiden: Universiteit Leiden.
Kemshall, H. and McCartan,
K. (2014) Managing sex offenders in the UK:
Challenges for policy and practice. In: McCartan, K., ed. (2014) Responding to Sexual Offending: Perceptions, Risk Management and Public
Protection. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 206-226. ISBN 9781137358127
Lauritsen,
J.L. & Rezey, M.L. (2013). Measuring
the prevalence of crime with the National Crime Victimization Survey. US
Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Marshall,
W. (2011). Milestones in Sexual Offender Research and Treatment. Keynote at
ATSA Annual conference. Toronto, Canada.
McCartan,
K. (2004) Here there be monsters: The public's
perception of paedophiles with particular reference to Belfast and Leicester. Medicine,
Science & the Law, 44. pp.
327-342. ISSN 0025-8024
McCartan,
K. (2010) Student/trainee-professional implicit
theories of paedophilia.
Psychology, Crime & Law, 16 (4).
pp. 265-288. ISSN 1068-316X
McCartan, K. (2013) From a lack of engagement and mistrust to partnership?
Public attitudes to the disclosure of sex offender information. International
Journal of Police Science and Management, 13 (3). pp. 219-236.
McCartan, K., Kemshall, H.
and Hudson, K. (2012) Public understandings of sexual abuse and sexual abusers. ATSA
Forum, xxiv (3)
Wilson, R., and Prescott,
D. (2014). Community based management of sex offender risk: options and
opportunities. In: McCartan, K., ed. (2014) Responding
to Sexual Offending: Perceptions, Risk Management and Public Protection.
Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 20 - 47. ISBN 978113735812
No comments:
Post a Comment