By Kieran McCartan, PhD, Kasia Uzieblo, PhD, and David S. Prescott, LICSW
Apparently, it’s never too late to try new things! Or so
they say. At least in Kieran’s and Kasia’s case, this is true. For the first
time, they both attended the IATSO annual conference. David is an older hand at
this and was a keynote speaker. Last week saw the 17th bi-annual
IATSO conference, which took place in Trondheim, Norway. IATSO has been affiliated
with ATSA for many years, and their conference is one of the big 5 conferences
that focus on the prevention, rehabilitation, and integration back into the
community of people convicted of sexual crimes (with the other four being NOTA,
ATSA, NL-ATSA, and ANZATSA). Despite the common focus concerning sexual
violence, we experience time and time again that each conference has its own
accents, brings different insights, and other opportunities to get acquainted
with colleagues as not every expert can attend the big 5. The entire experience made us more enthusiastic about attending ATSA in a few weeks.
This year the IATSO conference had well over 100 papers across 3 days of keynotes, pre-conference workshops, and parallel sessions with
over 400 attendees from no less than 20 countries, including Greenland. The
range of choice in the parallel sessions was rich. It included talks on – among
others – desistance, risk management, trauma-informed practice, compassion in
treatment, staff development, risk assessment, and public and professional perceptions.
The conference focused on all forms of sexual abuse (including child abuse,
rape, multiple preparator abuse, online sexual abuse, sibling sexual abuse, and
incels) relating to an array of characteristics (incl. gender, race, learning
difficulties, neurodiversity, and age); there was a topic or area for all
researchers and/or academics. The sessions also had various angles: some
speakers shared their most recent research results, while others delved deeper
into specific practices and cases. This way, the participants were offered a
diverse mix of science and practice.
There was a wide range of engaging pre-conference
workshops. Several workshops were provided by well-known ATSA, NOTA and ANZATSA
speakers such as Liam Marshall, Jayson Ware, Carol Carson, Mark Olver, Jennifer
Allotey, Keira Stockdale, David Prescott, Brian Judd, and Maaike Helmus. But
local experts (i.e., Svein Øverland) from Norway were also given a
platform. This approach was the common thread throughout the conference:
local professionals and academics were given ample opportunities to share their
clinical experiences and scientific insights with the public. This way, the
participants not only got acquainted with the rich
Norwegian culture, food, music, and nature before, during and/or after the
conference, but they also gained insights into local practices and experiences regarding
efforts to end sexual violence.
The keynotes also presented a mix of national and
international speakers, with a strong focus on Norwegian policy and practice over
the years from Knut Hemstad, who started the conference, Oddfrid Skope Tennfjord, talking about working with young people who have committed harmful sexual
behaviour and presenting the tool they developed to facilitate sexual education
in schools. Anja Kruse (ending the conference) talking about the role of
trauma and harm, partly caused by how society and justice treated them, in the
lives of men who have sexually offended. The other 4 keynotes where a mix of
Canada, USA and UK speakers with Liam Marshall talking about effective
treatment practices, Keira Stockdale talking about Offence Analogue and offence
replacement behaviours, Mark Olver talking about the role and relevance of
protective factors in risk assessment and risk management, Simon Hackett
talking about harmful sexual behaviour in young people, and David Prescott
talking about reflective professional development and treatment effectiveness.
Although at first glance the 7 keynotes seem quite dispirit, in fact they were not,
they all talked off compassion, service user engagement, desistence, and
professional reflection and engagement.
IATSO was a great, engaging, and intriguing professional conference that enforced the international aspects of working in sexual abuse prevention and response. Although it was the first time
that Kieran and Kasia attended, and like David, it won’t be his last. For those
interested: the next IATSO conference is scheduled for August 26-29, 2025, and
will take place in Poznań, Poland. All
information and updates can be found on their website: https://www.iatso.org .
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