1st Edition

Child Sexual Abuse Media Representations and Government Reactions

By Julia Davidson Copyright 2008
    192 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    192 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    Child Sexual Abuse critically evaluates the development of  policy and legislative measures to control sex offenders. The last fifteen years has seen increasing concern on the part of the government, criminal justice agencies, the media and the public, regarding child sexual abuse. This concern has been prompted by a series of events including cases inviting media attention and involving the abduction, sexual abuse and murder of young children. The response to this wave of child sexual abuse revelation has been to introduce increasingly punitive legislation regarding the punishment and control of sex offenders (sex offenders are the only group of offenders in British legal history to have their own act), both in custody and in the community. But this response, it is argued here, has developed in a reactionary way to media and public anxiety regarding the punishment and control of sex offenders (who have abused children) and the perceived threat of such offenders in the community.

    Defining Child Sexual Abuse.  Child Protection: The Crisis In Public Confidence: From Cleveland To Waterhouse.  The Role Of The Media: Public Anxiety High Profile.  The Legislative Framework (1953- 2004).  The Criminal Justice Response: Controlling Sex Offenders Public Appeasement

    Biography

    Dr Julia Davidson is based at the University Of Westminster.