Showing posts with label Articles/Child Abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles/Child Abuse. Show all posts

Thursday, January 15, 2009

'Stranger Danger' Warning To Young - Draws Criticism


by: Author Unknown,

CHILDREN as young as two should be taught the rudiments of personal safety and advised never to talk to strangers, a children's charity will say today.
In a campaign aimed at highlighting "stranger danger", the NSPCC alsos advise parents never to leave young children alone in a car - even for just a few minutes - and never to allow children aged under eight to go out on their own.
The initiative has been timed to coincide with the school summer holidays. The charity is also appealing for everyone to keep an eye on children playing outside and to call police or social workers if they see anything suspicious.
--
3rd August 1999
Paranoid parents 'denying children freedom to play
CHILDREN are being denied the opportunities for play enjoyed by previous generations because of their parents' paranoia, research will confirm this week. An exaggerated fear of harm from strangers, worries about traffic and unwillingness to let a child do anything with risk attached are blamed for unprecedented over-protectiveness.
Concern that children are growing up less independent and without the social skills that come from interactive play was heightened yesterday by child safety advice from the NSPCC. Under the heading "NSPCC warns of risks to children this summer", the charity mounted a campaign that was criticised by other organisations for compounding parents' fears.
Jim Harding, NSPCC chief executive, said: "The greatest fear of parents is that their child will be abducted and murdered by a stranger. It is important for us all to alert children to the possible dangers they may face outdoors this summer, without causing fear or panic."
[ Translate: 'we need to keep the momentum on our alarmist fundraising drive going, what better way to grab the headlines and keep the funds rolling in during August than this ?' ]
Other societies were concerned that the NSPCC campaign would fuel parental fears about molestation by strangers that already border on the irrational. The risk of a child being murdered by a stranger is no greater today than it was in the late Sixties, when children had much greater freedom to play. A child is in much greater danger of being harmed by a member of its family than a stranger. About six or seven children each year are murdered by strangers but more than 80 are killed by parents, carers or someone known to the family. The chances of a child aged one to four being killed by a stranger are less than one in a million, and have fallen by a third since 1988, while the risk to a child aged five to 15 is lower still.
Tiffany Jenkins, a founder member of the Families for Freedom group, which campaigns against the over-protection of children, said the NSPCC would worsen people's already distorted impression of the dangers. "They are deliberately scaremongering parents with these fairytale fears when their fears are already way too high."
June McKerrow, director of Mental Health Foundation, a charity that has commissioned research on children's well-being, said: "We don't need any more of these messages. If anything, the whole thing has already been taken too far."
Tim Gill, director of the Children's Play Council, said there were practical steps that could be taken to improve safety and reassure parents that their children could venture out to play. "The biggest thing that has changed has not been the threat from strangers but the risk from traffic - not merely to playing in the street but to getting around on your own.
Death rates for child pedestrians are among the highest in western Europe. The latest figures show that in 1997, 17,000 children under 15 were seriously injured by cars while playing on the street. Of these 133 died and thousands were left scarred with head and leg injuries. More boys than girls, 65 per cent, were run over.
--
What our children really need is a regime of benign neglect
The message in the new policy is: don't trust anybody because nobody trusts you
_Picture this. A man in his mid-thirties, bearded, wearing slightly scruffy jeans, is following two children of about eight and six down a suburban street. They are oblivious to their pursuer - if they seem on the point of turning round to look, he ducks out of sight into a garden. The little convoy turns around the corner. What do you see? A potential child molester tracking his next victims?
Actually, it was my neighbour following his children the first time they were allowed to the corner shop by themselves, making sure they were safe crossing the road.
We parents labour under a huge burden of worry about our kids in the modern world of car accidents, child abductions and murders, and careless or even violent childminders. No wonder concerned dads follow their offspring around the corner. No wonder mums ferry the kids to school in their four-wheel drive, all but armour-plated vehicles, accounting for two-thirds of the rush hour congestion in our towns and cities.
Reports like yesterday's warning on "stranger danger" from the NSPCC can only fuel such parental fears. The charity's checklist of advice is actually completely sensible. But to link basic steps for safeguarding children to the annual toll of six children murdered by strangers each year, as it did, is to move from common sense to hysteria. And we are edging towards a state of mind out of proportion to the - very real - dangers.
The typical British response to a photograph of a smiling bare-chested man with a small child, recently shown to people in different countries in a survey, was that it must be a paedophile. Italians were far more likely to see it as father and son.
This is the climate which has led to an entirely serious proposal to tag small children in supermarket creches, employing an extension of the scanning technology used to keep track of goods on the shelves. The supermarket concerned clearly believes parents will welcome it, and will be more likely to shop at its stores.
In fact, everywhere you look there are new plans to monitor and control children ever more closely. Every hour of our children's time must be observed and must be known. When does this obsession with monitoring childcare spill over from an entirely understandable and commendable concern for children's safety into molly-coddling that undermines their ability to learn how to fend for themselves, or, worse, exercise control of their behaviour?
After all, Jeremy Bentham's vision of the perfect utilitarian prison was one where the warder could spy at any time on the activities of any prisoner, like a malign spider at the centre of a web.
Our increasingly controlling and utilitarian vision of childhood explains the urge to educate at an earlier and earlier age. Nurseries and schools are in danger of being turned into knowledge factories in which our toddlers are the means of production, transforming gobbets of knowledge into increased national output. The people who care for them, chosen by parents on the basis of trust, will become subject to an authoritarian official inspection regime. The figure of the government inspector is not, in general, a loved or even respected one. The bureaucrat with powers over other people's jobs is all too often a petty tyrant.
This is taking the idea of the nanny state all too literally. Obviously a balance has to be struck. We must take care to keep our children safe, to educate them well, even ensure they are happy. The Government has to set minimum standards for childcare. Parents have to take all sensible precautions. And we must accept that there are bad carers and bad parents and bad people out there.
But there are costs to micro-managing every detail of children's lives. All those of us who are adults today will have experienced a much freer childhood than our own kids do now. We wandered around alone, caught buses and were sent to the shops at a younger age. We got into scrapes, or even danger. We learnt to cope. Now we are trying to teach our own children to cope at the same time as trying to preserve them from taking any of the risks they are meant to learn to handle. I don't believe it is possible. Experience can not be taught. They will have to cope later, and they will do so less well. This is not to argue sentimentally in favour of the school of hard knocks, but rather to point out that disappointment lies in store in any attempt to escape this trade-off between providing children with perfect safety and giving them the experiences that will teach them to protect themselves. It is an inescapable pain of parenthood that you can not do everything for your children. In fact, the best principle to apply in steering them safely towards adulthood is probably one of benign neglect.
As a teenager I kept a notebook in which I listed all the draconian laws I would pass to make the country a better place when I was running it. Luckily for the country, I gave up my youthful ambition to pursue a career in politics. But you get the impression many members of the present government were equally obnoxious as adolescents and, worse, have kept their notebooks.
The message in the new policy, like the message in warnings of stranger danger, is the same for parents and children alike. It is don't trust anybody because nobody trusts you.
What a sad and dangerous country Britain has become.
--
Comment in the Sunday Times...
Only last week, it happened that I was walking back from the post office when I heard someone screaming for help. I crossed the road, wondering if it was just a game, and found a young boy hanging by one arm from the balcony where he had been playing. Beneath him was a 12ft drop onto concrete. I caught him but the mother who eventually came out to investigate his howls released a torrent of abuse. Had I been a man, she'd have called the police. Nowadays, the only unpaid adult interested in our children is expected to be a paedophile.

References & Abstracts


by: Author Unknown,

1. (PsycINFO result) BOOK CHAPTER Weaver, Terri L.; Kilpatrick, Dean G.; Resnick, Heidi S.; Best, Connie L.; and others. An examination of physical assault and childhood victimization histories within a national probability sample of women. IN: Out of darkness: Contemporary perspectives on family violence.; Glenda Kaufman Kantor, Jana L. Jasinski, Eds. Sage Publications, Inc, Thousand Oaks, CA, US. (American Sociological Assn, Aug, 1994, Los Angeles, CA, US) 1997. p. 35-46. Pub type: Experimental.
Abstract: (from the chapter) To examine the relationship between childhood history and adult assault, childhood physical and sexual abuse was assessed within the national sample. It was expected that (a) both physical assault groups would have significantly higher rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) compared with nonvictims of assault, and (b) that the national sample of victims of romantic partner assault would report significantly more experiences of series assaults compared with victims of stranger assault. Following univariate analyses, logistic regressions were conducted to examine multivariate relationships between variables predicting series assaults and between variables predicting stranger/romantic partner assault. Information on the demographics, victimization screening, and PTSD symptoms were collected for 4,008 women aged 18-34 yrs.... Results indicate that factors distinctive for physical assault by romantic partners include younger victims, increased likelihood of employment, more series assaults, increased injury, and perpetrator under the influence of alcohol. Increased rates of childhood victimization, PTSD, and life threat appear to be more generally related to physical assault rather than to relationship with the perpetrator.
2. (PsycINFO result) Briggs, Kathleen; Hubbs-Tait, Laura; Culp, Rex E.; Blankemeyer, Maureen. Perceiver bias in expectancies for sexually abused children. Family Relations: Journal of Applied Family & Child Studies, 1995 Jul, v44 (n3):291-298.
Abstract: (journal abstract) College students (N = 134) judged children in vignettes. Vignettes varied on child gender and family history label (sexually abused, mother dying of cancer, normal). Perceiver bias was confirmed. Sexually abused children were expected to have more behavior problems than children whose mothers had terminal cancer. When acquaintance with victims of sexual abuse was controlled, male and female respondents' perceptions did not differ. However, perceptions of female sexual abuse victims were more biased than perceptions of male victims. ((c) 1998 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved).
3. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce; Tromovitch, Philip; Bauserman, Robert. A meta-analytic examination of assumed properties of child sexual abuse using college samples. Psychological Bulletin, 1998 Jul, v124 (n1):22-53.
Abstract: (journal abstract) Many lay persons and professionals believe that child sexual abuse (CSA) causes intense harm, regardless of gender, pervasively in the general population. The authors examined this belief by reviewing 59 studies based on college samples. Meta-analyses revealed that students with CSA were, on average, slightly less well adjusted than controls. However, this poorer adjustment could not be attributed to CSA because family environment (FE) was consistently confounded with CSA, FE explained considerably more adjustment variance than CSA, and CSA-adjustment relations generally became nonsignificant when studies controlled for FE. Self-reported reactions to and effects from CSA indicated that negative effects were neither pervasive nor typically intense, and than men reacted much less negatively than women. The college data were completely consistent with data from national samples. Basic beliefs about CSA in the general population were not supported. ((c) 1998 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved).
4. (PsycINFO result) McCarthy, Barry W. Commentary: Effects of sexual trauma on adult sexuality. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 1998 Apr-Jun, v24 (n2):91-92.
Abstract: Comments on M. G. Bartoi and B. N. Kinder's (see record 1998-02245-002) study of the effects of child and adult sexual abuse on the current sexual functioning of female college students. McCarthy adds further suggestions for future research, including a fine grain analysis of the cognitions and emotional processes at the time of the traumatic incident and how the incident was handled. ((c) 1998 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved).
5. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce; Tromovitch, Philip. A meta-analytic review of findings from national samples on psychological correlates of child sexual abuse. Journal of Sex Research, 1997, v34 (n3):237-255.
Abstract: To evaluate the implications and conclusions of literature reviews (e.g., J. H. Beitchman et al, 1991) on psychological correlates of child sexual abuse (CSA) that have relied on studies using clinical and legal samples, the authors conducted a literature review/meta-analysis of 7 studies using national probability samples. Contrary to previous conclusions, it was found that, in the general population, CSA is not associated with pervasive harm, and that harm, when it occurs, is not typically intense. CSA experiences for males and females are not equivalent; a substantially lower proportion of males reported negative effects. The authors also found that conclusions about a causal link between CSA and later psychological maladjustment in the general population cannot be made safely because of the reliable presence of confounding variables. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1998 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
6. (PsycINFO result) Bauserman, Robert; Rind, Bruce. Psychological correlates of male child and adolescent sexual experiences with adults: A review of the nonclinical literature. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 1997 Apr, v26 (n2):105-141. Pub type: Literature Review; Review.
Abstract: Researchers have generally neglected sexual experiences of boys with adults, assumed them to be the same as those of girls, or tried to understand them by referring to clinical research while ignoring nonclinical research. A review of nonclinical research allows a more complete understanding of boys' sexual experiences with adults and the outcomes and correlates of those experiences. Research with nonclinical samples reveals a broad range of reactions, with most of them being either neutral or positive. Clinical samples reveal a narrower, primarily negative set of reactions. Comparison of the reactions of boys and girls shows that reactions and outcomes for boys are more likely to be neutral or positive. Moderator variables, including presence of force, perceptions of consent, and relationship to the adult, also relate to outcomes. Incestuous contacts and those involving force or threats are most likely to be negative. Problems in this field of research include broad and vague definitions of "abuse" and conflation of value judgments with harm. Effects of boys' early sexual experiences with older persons in general cannot be accurately inferred from clinical research alone or from girls' experiences. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1997 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
7. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce. "An analysis of human sexuality textbook coverage of the psychological correlates of adult-nonadult sex.": Response. Journal of Sex Research, 1996, v33 (n2):173-174.
Abstract: Responds to N. McConaghy's comments (see record ##199605298-009) on Rind's original article (see record 83-24358) on the analysis of human sexual textbook coverage of the psychological correlates of adult-nonadult sex. Rind believes that McConaghy offered a number of constructive criticisms. Rind's responses are made in an effort to add clarity to the points that McConaghy raised. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1997 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
8. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce; Jaeger, Marianne; Strohmetz, David B. Effect of crime seriousness on simulated jurors' use of inadmissible evidence. Journal of Social Psychology, 1995 Aug, v135 (n4):417-424.
Abstract: Examined the effect of crime seriousness on 120 undergraduate student jurors' use of inadmissible evidence. Subjects were 17-55 yr olds. Subjects read a brief trial summary of a crime that was low, intermediate, or high in seriousness (vandalism, arson, or murder). Half of the sample was exposed to ambiguous evidence, and the other half was exposed to damaging inadmissible evidence. Across crimes, all factors were held constant except for descriptions of the crimes themselves. Only when the crime was not serious were Subjects biased by the inadmissible evidence. Crime seriousness was positively correlated with guilt judgments when the evidence was ambiguous, but not when damaging inadmissible evidence was added. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1996 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
9. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce. An analysis of human sexuality textbook coverage of the psychological correlates of adult-nonadult sex. Journal of Sex Research, 1995, v32 (n3):219-233.
Abstract: Examined the ways in which human sexuality textbooks (HSTs) covered the psychological correlates of adult-nonadult sex. 14 HSTs, containing correlates, consequences, or effects of adult-nonadult sex were coded by 5 coders. 13 items were developed for the coders, such as, use of clinical/legal samples, range of reactions, sex differences, generalizability, and causal attributions. Results show that 9 HSTs presented highly biased information, 3 were moderately biased, and 2 were unbiased. Bias in reporting correlates was indicated by an over reliance on findings from clinical and legal samples, exaggerated reports of the extent and typical intensity of harm, failure to separate incestuous from nonincestuous experiences, failure to separate male and female experiences and reactions, and inappropriate generalizations and causal attributions. Over reliance on using reports from clinical and legal samples resulted in many of the other biases. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1996 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
10. (PsycINFO result) Rind, Bruce; Bauserman, Robert. Biased terminology effects and biased information processing in research on adult-nonadult sexual interactions: An empirical investigation. Journal of Sex Research, 1993 Aug, v30 (n3):260-269.
Abstract: 80 undergraduates read a shortened journal article that used either neutral or negative terms to describe a number of cases of sexual relationships between male adolescents and male adults. Additionally, students were exposed either to descriptive information or descriptive plus long-term non-negative outcome information. The purpose of this manipulation was to examine whether students would process the neutral and positive data in a biased fashion, because these data contradict strongly held assumptions of harm as a consequence of sexual contacts between adults and children/adolescents. Subjects' judgments were negatively biased by the negative terminology. The Subjects also exhibited evidence for biased processing of the non-negative outcome information. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1994 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
11. (PsycINFO result) Bauserman, Robert. Egalitarian, sexist, and aggressive sexual materials: Attitude effects and viewer responses. Journal of Sex Research, 1998 Aug, v35 (n3):244-253. Pub type: Empirical Study.
Abstract: Examined attitudinal effects of, and evaluative and cognitive responses to, 3 types of sexually explicit scenes: egalitarian, sexist, and sexually aggressive. Based on the Elaboration Likelihood Model of persuasion (R. Petty and J. Cacioppo, 1986), 2 experiments were conducted. Exp 1 identified portrayals that differed in the extent of sexism and sexual aggression. These stimulus materials were used in Exp 2 to measure attitude change. It was hypothesized that 3 types of scenes should have different effects on attitudes relevant to sexual equality and sexual aggression. In Exp 1, 20 male college students rated characteristics of each scene according to degree of physical force the male used against the female. In Exp 2, 115 undergraduate males were assigned to a control group or viewed scenes representative of 1 of the 3 categories, and completed evaluative ratings, thought-listing tasks, and measures of sexual attitudes and beliefs. Type of scene viewed had no effect on attitudes, but Subjects' evaluative and cognitive reactions were most negative following sexually aggressive scenes and most positive following egalitarian scenes. ((c) 1998 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved).
12. (PsycINFO result) Bauserman, Robert. Sexual aggression and pornography: A review of correlational research. Basic & Applied Social Psychology, 1996 Dec, v18 (n4):405-427. Pub type: Literature Review; Review.
Abstract: Ongoing concern about effects of sexually explicit materials includes the role of such material in sex offenses. Issues include sex offenders' experiences with pornography and the link between pornography and sex crime rates. Review of the literature shows that sex offenders typically do not have earlier or more unusual exposure to pornography in childhood or adolescence, compared to nonoffenders. However, a minority of offenders report current use of pornography in their offenses. Rape rates are not consistently associated with pornography circulation, and the relationships found are ambiguous. Findings are consistent with a social learning view of pornography, but not with the view that sexually explicit materials in general contribute directly to sex crimes. The effort to reduce sex offenses should focus on types of experiences and backgrounds applicable to a larger number of offenders. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1997 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
13. (PsycINFO result) Bauserman, Robert; Davis, Clive. Perceptions of early sexual experiences and adult sexual adjustment. Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 1996, v8 (n3):37-59.
Abstract: Examined self-evaluations of childhood and adolescent sexual experiences as positive, mixed, or negative, and the relationship of these evaluations to adult sexual attitudes and adjustment. 141 undergraduates completed measures of sexual attitudes, sexual satisfaction, and sexual history (e.g., Sexual History Questionnaire, Sexual Opinion Survey, Sexual Attitudes for Self and Others Questionnaire, and Sexual Satisfaction Inventory). Results show that Subjects who positively evaluated their early sexual experiences were associated with greater erotophilia, more acceptance of various sexual behaviors for self and others, greater sexual satisfaction, and greater acceptance of sexual behaviors at younger ages. Findings emphasize the importance of self-evaluation of one's sexual experiences to understand the relationship to one's later sexuality. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1997 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
14. (PsycINFO result) Davis, Clive M.; Bauserman, Robert. Exposure to sexually explicit materials: An attitude change perspective. Annual Review of Sex Research, 1993, v4:121-209. Pub type: Literature Review; Review.
Abstract: Presents a review of research findings on exposure to sexually explicit materials (SEM), using 2 mainstream social psychological theories of attitude change: the Elaboration Likelihood Model (R. E. Petty and J. T. Cacioppo, 1986), and the Heuristic-Systematic Model (S. Chaiken et al, 1989). The review covers 16 analyses of SEM research (published 1967-1990) in various media. Repeated exposure to SEM tends to make the types of behavior, beliefs, and attitudes that are depicted more accepted. Individuals predisposed to adversarial sexual beliefs and behavior are reinforced by SEM depicting these conditions. Yet, there is no evidence that shows mere exposure to SEM is sufficient to produce sustained attitude change (i.e., inappropriate behavior and attitudes about sexuality and toward women). (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1994 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
15. (PsycINFO result) Bauserman, Robert. Objectivity and ideology: Criticism of Theo Sandfort's research on man-boy sexual relations. Journal of Homosexuality, 1990, v20 (n1-2):297-312.
Abstract: Three critiques of T. Sandfort's (1982) research on man-boy sexual relationships in the Netherlands are examined and evaluated. The critiques were made by D. Finkelhor (1984), D. Mrazek (1985), and W. Masters et al (1985). It is argued that moral condemnation of such relationships, combined with a prevailing ideology of boy "victims" and adult "perpetrators," results in efforts by Sandfort's critics to attack and discredit his research rather than evaluate it objectively. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1991 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
16. (PsycINFO result) BOOK CHAPTER; CONFERENCE Sandfort, T. G. M. The argument for adult-child sexual contact: A critical appraisal and new data. IN: The sexual abuse of children, Vol. 1: Theory and research; Vol. 2: Clinical issues.; William O'Donohue, James H. Geer, Eds. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc, Hillsdale, NJ, US. (European Congress of Psychology, 1st, Jul, 1989) 1992. p. 38-48.
Abstract: (from the chapter) (criticizes studies that assume) that sexual contacts between adults and children are always a form of sexual abuse; it will be documented how this assumption influences the way in which investigations are carried out; data will be presented from research in which sexual contacts between adults and children have not been a priori considered to be abuse.
17. (PsycINFO result) BOOK CHAPTER Sandfort, Theo G. M.; Everaerd, Walter T. A. M. Male juvenile partners in pedophilia. IN: Childhood and adolescent sexology. Handbook of sexology, Vol. 7.; M. E. Perry, Ed. Elsevier Science Publishing Co, Inc, Amsterdam, Netherlands. 1990. p. 361-380.
Abstract: (summarized) Reviews literature on the definitions and outcomes of male-male pedophilia on juvenile partners. (from the chapter) pedophilia as behavior; pedophilia as a motive; pedophilia as identity; children in pedophile relationships... what is known about children in pedophile relationships; start of the affair and first sexual contact; the boys' involvement in the sexual contact: engagement and experience; motives of boys for maintaining pedophile relationships; power differences; the role of the parents; consequences of pedophile relationships for the child.
18. (PsycINFO result) Sandfort, Theo; Brongersma, Edward; Van Naerssen, Alex. Man-boy relationships: Different concepts for a diversity of phenomena. Journal of Homosexuality, 1990, v20 (n1-2):5-12.
Abstract: Argues that the current social climate makes it difficult to objectively study sexual relationships between men and boys, since society views such relationships solely as forms of sexual abuse. The diversity of man-boy relationships in different societies is discussed, and it is argued that such relationships are not necessarily pathological. Various terms used for such relationships have different meanings, with the term "pedophilia" carrying a connotation of psychiatric pathology. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1991 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
19. (PsycINFO result) Goddijn, Jolande; Sandfort, Theo. Sociale ondersteuning bij de verwerking van traumatische seksuele ervaringen in de jeugdjaren. / Social support associated with coping after traumatic sexual experiences... Gedrag & Gezondheid: Tijdschrift voor Psychologie & Gezondheid, 1988 Jul, v16 (n2):60-67. Language: Dutch.
Abstract: Studied the extent to which social factors affect adaptation after traumatic sexual experiences (TSEs). Human subjects: 66 male and female Dutch adolescents and adults (18-23 yrs) (at least 1 TSE before age 16 yrs). Subjects were interviewed about their TSEs with a structured questionnaire. Subjects' mental health and sexual desires, excitation, and satisfaction since their TSEs were rated. Tests used: A shortened version of the Symptom Distress Checklist. (English abstract) (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1990 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
20. (PsycINFO result) Sandfort, Theodorus G. Sex in pedophiliac relationships: An empirical investigation among a nonrepresentative group of boys. Journal of Sex Research, 1984 May, v20 (n2):123-142.
Abstract: Investigated whether sexual relations with an adult can be a positive experience for a child. Subjects were 25 10-16 yr old boys who were then involved in pedophiliac relationships with adult males. Subjects were located through their adult partners, who in turn were approached through pedophile workgroups. Although Subjects were able to point to some negative aspects of their sexual contacts, most of them reported experiencing these contacts as predominantly positive. The sexual contacts had no negative influence on Subjects' sense of general well-being, nor did the Subjects perceive in these contacts a misuse of authority by the adult. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1985 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
21. (PsycINFO result) Sandfort, Theo. Pedophile relationships in the Netherlands: Alternative lifestyle for children? Alternative Lifestyles, 1983 Spring, v5 (n3):164-183.
Abstract: Studied the experiences and perceptions of 25 10-16 yr old boys in ongoing relationships with 26-66 yr old pedophiles in The Netherlands using a semistructured interview technique. Areas of personal significance or value to the boys, the pedophile himself, and the sexual contact, were investigated for their emotional meaning and salience. The older partner and pedophile relationship were significant but not overtly important aspects of the boys' experiences. The partner and relationship, including sexual aspects, were experienced in predominantly positive terms; evidence of exploitation or misuse was absent. Implications for research and social policy are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1984 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
22. (PsycINFO result) Brongersma, Edward. The Thera inscriptions: Ritual or slander? Journal of Homosexuality, 1990, v20 (n1-2):31-40.
Abstract: Discusses inscriptions carved in a rock on the Greek island of Thera and dating from the 6th or 7th century BC that have homosexual contents. Originally considered a testimony to ritual sacred acts, they were described by H. I. Marrou (1956) and K. J. Dover (1978) as vulgar pornographic graffiti. Arguments against this view and in favor of the formal ritual interpretation are proposed. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1991 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
23. (PsycINFO result) Brongersma, Edward. Boy-lovers and their influence on boys: Distorted research and anecdotal observations. Journal of Homosexuality, 1990, v20 (n1-2):145-173.
Abstract: Argues that more can be learned about boy-lovers from reading some excellent novels than from so-called scientific studies. Research is often unreliable because (1) it assumes that pedosexual activity is a positive indicator of pedophilia, (2) no distinction is drawn between pseudo-pedophiles and real pedophiles, (3) no difference is recognized between boys and girls as partners, and (4) it is highly distorted by bias. The influence on the boy in boy-man relationships can be strong in lasting relationships; it can be wholesome or unwholesome. Within a relationship, sex is usually a secondary element, although it can be important in sexual instruction. The impact of the law, the hostility of parents, and the problem of partners' inequality are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1991 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
24. (PsycINFO result) Brongersma, Edward. Aggression against pedophiles. Special Issue: Empirical approaches to law and psychiatry. International Journal of Law & Psychiatry, 1984, v7 (n1):79-87.
Abstract: Argues that pedophilia has been considered a crime only since the Christians termed it sinful and that the difficulties caused by the repression of pedophilia make people violent in their rejection of pedophiles and strongly committed to their prejudices. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1985 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).
25. (PsycINFO result) Brongersma, E. Sexuality and the law. Journal of the American Institute of Hypnosis, 1973 Sep, v14 (n5):210-221.
Abstract: Considers that the law cannot legislate sexual morality and that society has no right to intervene in violations of the law which do not infringe on the rights of others (e.g., prostitution or pornography). The Speijer report, an analysis of the penal code and its relationship to sexual behavior in the Netherlands, is examined as a modern and enlightened approach. (PsycINFO Database Copyright 1975 American Psychological Assn, all rights reserved).

Youths Are Liberal Towards Child Sex


by: Author Unknown,

Fredag 24. November 2000

Oslo (NTB): 28.6 percent of men between 18 and 20 years says that there is some probability that they could have sex with a child.
The question that was asked 700 youths from Oslo in an age from 18 to 20 years was: Would you have sex with a child if you were sure that you won't be discovered or punished for that?
28.6 Percent of the young men answered that there might be a possibility that they could have sex with a child without defining an age. 5.9 Percent answered that they have had sex with a child under 12 years, while 19.1 percent say that they have had sex with a child between 13 and 14 years, TV2 reports.
The investigation was done by the Norwegian Institute for Research on Adolescence, Welfare and Age. The background for this research is the fact that young men are responsible for a lot of sexual abuse. It's the first time in the world that youth's attitudes as concerns sex with children are mapped out.
The investigation also shows that young men who accept sex with children also make light of rape.

When A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Worries


by: Author Unknown,

Canada:
December 26th 2000

A recent child pornography case discussed in Canadian newspapers has serious implications for everyone. Why? Let's look at the details first.
In February 2000, an Ottawa area man, Andrzej Mikuta, was charged with making child pornography because of photos of his 4-year-old son. The Children's Aid Society immediately removed his two children from his home. When they were returned, for a time he was barred from seeing them and forced to move out of his own house. With her limited English, his wife couldn't do much. His whole family was devastated. His standing in the community suffered. His son, previously free of psychological problems, now worries that he is a bad person. He is afraid of many normal activities and people.
What was Mikuta's crime? Four photos of his son without clothes. The photos were sent for developing to a Costco store. An employee called the police, the police laid charges, and the Mikuta family went through a two-month nightmare.
In April, the Crown dropped the charges, saying there was no reasonable chance of conviction. Was there an apology to the Mikutas? Costco expressed no regrets. The police sent out a news release smugly claiming moral victory. The Children's Aid Society wanted to pursue child protection proceedings against the family. The nightmare goes on.
Is this case an aberration? Unfortunately not. Similar ones appeared recently in New Jersey and Ohio. Store clerks turned photos over to the police, who laid charges.
In both the Ontario and Ohio cases, a parent underwent psychological testing or counselling. Mr. Mikuta had to be tested to prove he was not a pedophile.
In Ohio, the mother, Cynthia Stewart, was ordered into six months of counselling to avoid the possibility of 16 years in jail for two photos. Her grave error was one depicting her _daughter_ washing off with a showerhead.
So let's get this straight. Young kids know that _nudity_ is natural. They have fun doing ordinary things in their homes without clothes on. But as soon as there is one private picture of this, their parents become the worst criminals. They may immediately lose their children, their job, their reputation -- long before any trial. They are guilty until proven innocent. And to prove or sustain innocence, they must undergo a humiliating psychological program.
Our culture has a phobia about unclothed bodies. We hear that adults should not be nude in front of their children -- from Joyce Brothers, Ann Landers, and other popularizers who have no research behind their opinions. From the Mikuta and similar cases, we hear that all child nudity is potentially heinous pornography.
But research on this subject suggests something different. Families where nudity is accepted may raise children who are better adjusted in significant ways -- with fewer teen pregnancies, fewer divorces, and higher acceptance of their adult sexuality. It's not the nudity itself that's important, but the attitudes towards it within the family.
In scandalizing nude bodies and using almost-nude ones alluringly to sell anything, we reveal an attitude that simultaneously says "Come and get it" and "Be damned if you do." That this accompanies appalling body hangups is hardly surprising, given the intimacy and vulnerability in sexuality. But a nude body does not itself imply or invite sexual activity, proper or improper, in adults or children, especially in the privacy of one's home.
While we know of healthy attitudes towards nude bodies, we are often trained to deny them. The real perversion isn't nudity, it's fear and loathing of it. Body shame is then foisted on innocent children -- not by parents like Andrzej Mikuta and Cynthia Stewart, but by those standing in narrow, ignorant judgment over them. The CAS, for example.
The police and Crown prosecutor in the Mikuta case warned that his photos were not just cute baby-in-the-bathtub shots. Good. Now we know who the great Canadian photography critics are. Cuteness and baths are OK, but anything else with nudity may get us ten years behind bars.
James Kincaid, English professor at the University of Southern California, put it this way: It seems that every photo of a nude child "must pass this test: can we create a sexual fantasy that includes it? Such directives seem an efficient means for manufacturing a whole nation of pedophiles."
We need less fantasy about pedophilia, which is actually uncommon. We need instead to focus on children learning the physical natures of both sexes at all ages without fear or shame of their own or others' bodies. Their body image and self-esteem are harmed more by panicking over nudity than by ignoring it, accepting it, or using it to teach body education and respect.
Will hysteria over nude children ruin some wonderful family moments? Suppose we take a photo of our kid doing cartwheels or somersaults in a joyous state without clothes: How may we have it developed so that we get our photo back and not a pair of handcuffs? Using private film developers or digital cameras may be the only way.
Because of cases like the Mikutas', we may have to hide what is normal and healthy. Because children don't need the police and CAS exploiting them, harassing families, and trying to enforce false, harmful beliefs.

The Abuse Of Power


by: Author Unknown,

From UK Today

TO JUDGE by much of the media you would think that paedophiles are the main and constant danger to children. They are not.
Each year about 80 children are murdered - 73 of them will be killed by their parents or close relatives. On average only seven children will die at the hands of strangers, and only a couple of these will be motivated by sex.
In fact the stereotype of the 'dirty old man' is far from the truth. In a study of Childline calls, strangers accounted for just eight out of 1,003 cases. The focus on 'paedophiles' reinforces images of abusers as monsters who are totally different to other men, drawing attention away from the far more prevalent issue of abuse within the family. The family is the most dangerous place for children-between the ages of one and five it is the most common place for a child to be killed. In 1995 the chances of being murdered if you were under one year old was almost double the national average and children of that age were most at risk of being killed by a parent. In such circumstances the vast amount of warning about child abuse, propaganda about the dangers to children and so on should be directed to the family.
Compare the seven children murdered by strangers to traffic deaths.
Last year 103 child pedestrians were killed on the roads. More than 6,000 others were injured, over 1,000 of them seriously, leaving them disfigured or disabled for life. One obvious way to reduce this death toll is to slash the speed limits. Seventeen out of 20 children hit by a car travelling at 40mph will be killed. At 30mph nearly half die. At 20 mph one in 20 dies. Removing bull-bars from cars and trucks also cuts death rates dramatically.
But the government backed off from a 20 mph limit in the face of the car lobby. Many of the papers which have whipped up panic and paranoia over paedophiles applauded the government's climbdown. The government refuses to act over other threats faced by children and young people.
It does not keep statistics on the number of homeless young people. But charities estimate that between 100,000 and 200,000 under 18 year olds experience homelessness each year. Housing Benefit does not cover the costs of deposits on rented accommodation and, in October 1996, Housing Benefit for people under 25 was restricted even further to the cost of a single room in shared accommodation.
Over 40,000 children run away from home each year because of violence or unbearable family tensions. Yet government policy is based on the view that children should stay with their families. Since 1988 16 and 17 year olds have not been entitled to Income Support [welfare payments]. When they flee their homes they often end up on the streets or are vulnerable to drug dealers or to being drawn into prostitution.
In June this year Britain's shameful record on child poverty was laid bare in a damning United Nations report revealing that millions of children are trappe d in conditions among the worst in Europe. Such poverty breeds paranoia, the search for a scapegoat. That was the image that came to mind last week as a mob rampaged through the Portsmouth suburb of Paulsgrove, driving innocent people on a supposed list of alleged paedophiles from their homes. The 20 names on the Paulsgrove residents' hit list included a 17 year old who had sex with his 15 year old girlfriend.
Arthur Miller wrote a powerful play about Salem, the New England town where, in 1692, accusations by a group of teenagers triggered a panic that led 19 people to be executed as witches. The Crucible - recently turned into an equally powerful film - shows how hysteria takes hold of a community. It begins when the deep-felt anxieties of some of the most downcast and oppressed lead them to imagine that there are evil influences living in their midst.
Suddenly no one, however innocent, is immune from accusation. Paulsgrove is like thousands of other suburban and inner-city estates in Britain, bitter at what is happening to their lives after 18 years of Thatcherism and three years of abandonment by New Labour. They feel someone must be to blame, but don't know who. Such alienation pervades every advanced capitalist society. And it can lead to quite irrational moods developing. This feeling is then used by some of the less downcast and oppressed to further their own interests.
It seems the government would rather pander to media paranoia-pushers than tackle children's root problems. The more they devote themselves to the cosy world of Westminster, with its business breakfasts, public relations freebies and champagne parties, the more they fear the millions of people they have no real contact with. To read some of the newspapers last week you would think that council estates are beyond the boundaries of civilisation.
So David Aaronovitch writes in the Independent that "watching Paulsgrove Woman at work has reemphasized for me how scared I am of a certain part of our society. Paulsgrove Woman, I felt, was of an alien race to me." He then goes on both to call for the prosecution of those leading the Paulsgrove demonstrations and yet to accept their demands.
"Concerns about 'demonisation'," he writes, in words which could have come from the governor of Massachusetts at the time of Salem, "should not blind us to the existence of demons." The Guardian editorial is hardly any better.
It says the "standoff" has "exposed the chasm which divides the 3,000 or so estates like Paulsgrove from the more affluent, sheltered parts of Britain". In these it claims "calmer discussion prevails", based on "the liberal arguments familiar in newspapers, TV studios, parliamentary tearooms and bishops' studies".
But it is precisely in these "more affluent" places that the poison which afflicted Paulsgrove originated. The scares touch a nerve among millions of people who feel that they have to go to any lengths to protect children from danger, including the rapid jerry-built construction of a nanny state. Those who benefit from this are not the poor.
The witch-hunt was started in a newspaper by Rebekah Wade, the highly paid editor of the News of the World and a welcome face in Downing Street. It followed on from the witch-hunt against refugees and gypsys, incited from the parliamentary tea rooms by William Hague and Ann Widdecombe, and the howling against gay men over Section 28 - backed by the bishops in the House of Lords.
There were rumours that neo-Nazi organisers arrived on Paulsgrove after a few days, but they are just rumours -- the deepest prejudices in Britain are not to be found on council estates but on the golf courses of Middle England and the grouse moors of the upper classes - as anyone who's ever listened to a House of Lords debate or read the letters page of the Daily Telegraph should know. Sustained challenges to such prejudices arise when working class people have strong, collective and workplace organisations that enable them to face up to those who really oppress them.
The tragedy in places like Paulsgrove is that genuine collective class organisation is weak. They become fragmented groups of people with little connection with each other, and easily manipulated by the likes of Rebekah Wade.
I suspect, however, that David Aaronovitch, the Guardian editorial writers, the salaried middle-class charity organisers and their ilk, would be even more unhappy if such organisations did exist and did lead the people of Paulsgrove in a clear-sighted fight against those who really condemn them and their children to rotten lives.
--
IT HAS been hard to find any rational debate amid all the recent press hysteria about paedophilia. Any sexual abuse of children is utterly horrific. But papers like the News of the World have deliberately exaggerated the extent of the problem.
They would have us believe that there are thousands of paedophiles ready to pounce on our children. Thankfully, however, violent sexual assaults on children are extremely rare. The News of the World claims there are 110,000 convicted paedophiles in England and Wales. According to police figures, of these 110,000 there are about 50 who they define as paedophiles who have raped or abducted children - and most of those 50 are safely locked up.
Even among the free 'schedule one offenders', who have been convicted and who remain on the sex offenders register for life, there is a young woman who is banned for life from contact with children because she ripped a chain off a 13 year old's neck when she was 16 years old. The 1989 sex offenders register contains a six year old boy who put his hands down a girl's pants in the playground. If convicted, sex offenders are trapped in a system that creates monsters and then institutionalises them.
The News of the World also uses a wide definition of paedophilia, which includes incidents like flashing and downloading indecent material from the Internet. The paper often seems to apply the label to any man who fancies anyone under 18, including the most busty 17-and-a-half year old -- and by that definition, most tabloid readers are paedophiles.
Flashing or downloading indecent pictures is not the same as sexually attacking or raping a child. The press paint a picture of paedophiles as "evil monsters" who are violent strangers preying on a community from the outside. In fact most sexual abuse takes place within the family.
It is not good enough to dismiss this as the result of evil individuals. We have to look at the kind of society we live in - the daily grind of life-poverty, long working hours, bad housing, poor education and so on-puts immense strain on our ability to develop good relationships.
One recent Home Office study of paedophiles found "a lack of intimacy and high levels of emotional loneliness" were common factors in the background of child sex offenders. This loneliness is also true of too many uncared-for children. The combination of these factors tells us much about why paedophile relationships so often remain undetected. If we understand that the 109,950 paedophiles who the police do not judge to be about to rape or abduct children are far more "ordinary" than the monsters in the media, then we can start to understand why the paedophile is so often strongly loved and defended by the child, even in the face of society's disapproval and even where obvious abuse is involved.
We want to see an end to all forms of abuse. But that will not come about by press witch-hunts or repressive sentencing.
Perhaps the most effective measure would be intensive supportive treatment for paedophiles of low intellect. A study in 1988 pointed out that, among 'untreated' offenders, those with a low intellect are most likely to reoffend. In the same year another study found that the people most likely not to reoffend are men over 40 years old outside of the family - the very men we are told are the real problem.
Yet treatment programmes for any paedophiles are woefully inadequate, and suffer from cuts and underfunding. According to the Prison Service annual report for 1999-2000, only 585 convicted sex offenders completed a treatment programme compared with the target of 700. The shortfall was blamed on a shortage of qualified staff. Often money is denied and, in some cases, withdrawn from such programmes.
Instead New Labour has played into the hands of the most conservative and reactionary. At the same time it allows open season to the Murdoch press which creates the witch-hunt but then sneers at the witch-hunters, all the while conceding their demands.
The real victims of this cynical manoeuvre are the many children who will continue to suffer abuse, sexual and physical, as a result of a system that encourages mob rule and cracks on about life sentences, but which does little or nothing to deal with the underlying issues.
--
Re-defining abuse?
The National Commission of Enquiry into the Prevention of Child Abuse, an NSPCC body, widely defines abuse as follows:
'Child abuse consists of anything which individuals, institutions or processes do, or fail to do, which directly or indirectly harms children, or damages their prospects of safe and healthy development into adulthood. Abuse need not, under this formula, be deliberate, direct or even committed by a person. It can be carried out by vague abstractions, by "institutions and processes". It need not even cause actual harm to the children concerned, only to their "prospects", which they may overcome. And the harm itself remains left to subjective assessment.'

Swallows, Amazons... Prisoners


by: Author Unknown,

July 15 2000,

Girls and boys go out to play... Not any more they don't. When I grew up in the 1960s and 1970s, the lanes, fields, farmyards and woods for miles around our house were our playground. We knew not to accept lifts from strangers and to ride our bikes sensibly when cars were around.
Beyond that, we were left to run our own risks, have our own adventures and extricate ourselves from our own scrapes. As long as we were back by teatime, our parents were happy.
How different life was then. I, like every mother of a little girl, have read with mounting dread the news of the probable abduction of Sarah Payne. I know that, like the Payne parents, my husband and I are in a minority in allowing our children to play unsupervised in the fields around our house. We want to believe that we are still doing the right thing: allowing them freedom, encouraging their independence. But could we live with ourselves if the worst happened?
Next week, our seven-year-old daughter leaves for her first summer camp: a *Secret Seven* activity holiday, in which the children follow a trail of clues that will lead to baddies, treasure or whatever. I am half-envious, because I imagine that it will be great fun. But there is also a poignant realisation that her packaged week at camp is only a faint echo of a liberty lost to most children of her age.
For the other 51 weeks of the year, they lead lives so suffocating that Enid Blyton's young characters would have either escaped or expired.
We have always believed that growing up should be a process of weaning from parental control and supervision. It's not that we don't worry. A few weekends ago, we let the girls go for their first long walk in the country near our new house. Unknown to them, we followed at a distance, peeking over hedges to check that they were taking their responsibility seriously.
Has life become more dangerous for our children? It is an almost universal belief. My mother claims that she never thought about us being abducted, yet a recent study in the London borough of Camden found that 90 per cent of parents are now "very" or "quite" worried about the possible abduction or molestation of their children.
There are eight and a half million children aged between five and 16 in Britain, and how often do you read of one being snatched? It is because the crime is so rare that newspapers give it so much publicity when it happens. Statistically, your child is more likely to get ten A* GCSEs than to be abducted by a stranger.
About 500 children are abducted each year - the vast majority of them by one of their own parents during a divorce battle. Children aged between five and 16 are the population group least likely to be murdered. When they are, the murderer is almost always someone known to them.
As Mayer Hillman, of the Policy Studies Institute, points out: "Far more are killed by strangers behind the steering wheel of a motor vehicle than are killed by strangers on foot."
Although Britain has the safest roads in Europe, there have still been 200,000 children killed or seriously hurt on the roads in the past 20 years, nearly two-thirds when they were walking or cycling. The danger of traffic is parents' biggest worry after abduction - and probably a more soundly based one. In the past two decades, car traffic has almost doubled and vehicle speeds have risen, too. The fact that more children have not been killed or injured reflects the fact that they have been withdrawn from the danger - usually into the very cars they fear - not that the danger has lessened.
According to the latest National Travel Survey, only 1 per cent of five to ten-year-olds and 5 per cent of 11 to 15-year-olds cycle to school. It is not that they don't want to. A recent survey by the Hampshire County Council found that 97 per cent of children would cycle to school if there were better facilities. In the few areas with "safe routes", 50 per cent more children are allowed to go to school on their own.
As well as making our streets safer through traffic calming and removing 'bull-bars' from cars, we should also think about the damage done to children by being imprisoned at home. They are far less fit than they used to be: compared with 20 years ago, schoolchildren cycle 40 per cent less and walk 25 per cent less. We are storing up a coronary heart-disease time bomb.
And their mental health suffers, too. To depict every stranger as a potential paedophile is as silly and damaging as treating every man as a potential rapist. Mayer Hillman writes: "Children's lives have been evolving in a way that mirrors the characteristics of the lives of criminals in prison. They, too, have a roof over their heads, regular meals, and entertainment provided for them, but they are not free to go out. Enforced detention, and restrictions on how they spend their time, are intended to seriously diminish the quality of their lives. But children are not criminals."
We take away our children's freedom, something which for adults would be called a right. Each time I write about this subject I get letters from fellow mothers who say they have been shunned by the parents of their children's friends because they are deemed to have an "irresponsible" attitude to safety. I say the responsible way to behave is to keep your fears in proportion, train your children to cope with danger and allow them to reclaim the streets.
I don't go quite as far as Commander Walker's telegram in *Swallows and Amazons*: "Better drowned than duffers. If not duffers, won't drown." [USA/UK: duffers = incompetents] But I certainly don't want my children to be duffers. And the only way they can learn not to be is to be set free from the dangerous paranoia of over-protective parenthood.

Streets Safer For Children Than Ever Before


by: Author Unknown,

11th June 2000, Author & source unknown
New research has established that the frequency of child abduction, murder, attack and injury in car accidents is lower than for a decade - but parents are increasingly anxious. The myth of lurking danger behind every street corner has so alarmed the children's charity Play Scotland that at a conference in Glasgow yesterday it set out to convince parents that they are damaging children by being unnecessarily overprotective.
Stuart Waiton, a PhD research student, monitored 30 children during the past year to discover how their lives were affected by parents' worries. He found they lost an average of one hour's play time every day.
The number of offenders in England and Wales found guilty of gross indecency with a child dropped from 334 in 1988 to 264 in 1998. Between 1988 and 1999 the number of children murdered between the ages of five and 16 decreased in England and Wales from four per million to three. The number murdered under the age of five dropped from 12 per million to nine. Most are murdered by family members.
Waiton said that, despite the rise in divorce custody disputes, "Abductions have not increased in more than 60 years but parents are afraid to let children out of their sight and they are now suffering. Unsupervised play time is essential for the development of relationships and independence."
Research by the University of Coventry found that adults who played freely in the streets 30 years ago now rarely let their offspring out of the house unsupervised. Even child deaths from road accidents has decreased - from 10 deaths per 100,000 in 1979 to three per 100,000 in 1998.
Jennifer Cunningham, a Glasgow doctor, said: "Parents don't dare let children out of their sight - but without this time by themselves they cannot develop crucial cognitive and social skills."

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

PA SEX POLICE NAB KIDS - Child Felons Convicted


by: Author Unknown,

Article from The Guide, August 1999


Did the children think of them selves as victims? Newberry Township police chief Bill Myers chuckles and then pauses.
"I would say that they did, once it started it coming to light -- in other words, after the police became involved in it." By the time police and county investigators had interrogated some 24 youngsters implicated in a juvenile "sex ring" in York Haven, Pennsylvania, there were "victims" and "perpetrators" aplenty, but it wasn't easy to tell which from whom. Police say that the sex ring, which they busted last December, involved 17 children, ages seven to 16, who had sex together sporadically for two-and-a-half years in York Haven, population around 750, a down-at-the-heels hamlet on the Susquehanna River between Harrisburg and York. Pennsylvania law does not allow for prosecution of children younger than ten. But York County Assistant District Attorney Marylou Erb charged all participants ten or older -- six in all -- on counts ranging from "involuntary deviate sexual intercourse" and "indecent assault" to "[statutory] rape." One or two of the youngsters have been jailed, police chief Myers says, but details of the punishments have not been released. Juvenile court records are sealed and prosecutors won't discuss the case.
A staffer at the York County DA's office who identified herself only as "Randy" said the investigation into the sexual activity was over. But Myers told The Guide that prosecutions against some of the children are continuing.
None of the boys and girls had complained to authorities about the sex, which authorities grant was voluntary. "From what the investigators told me, the parents were shocked and surprised, while the kids were more nonchalant because they didn't understand what was wrong with it," says Caryl Clarke, a reporter with the York Daily Record, who covered the story. Participants in the sex ring were students at Northeastern Middle and York Haven Elementary Schools.
"Some of the assaults occurred in homes," noted the Daily Record. "Others happened outside, such as in wooded areas."
One of the last instances of sex play occurred at a sleepover after the 16th birthday party of one of the girls. Two boys, 11, were present, one boy 13, and another girl, 16. "Supposedly what happened was they were playing spin the bottle and things got beyond that,'' chief Myers told the Associated Press. "The story was the bottle pointed toward one of the males and he had to have intercourse with one of the girls. Well, I guess this turned out to be just the tip of the iceberg.'' After the birthday party, according to the AP, one of the girls told to her mother that one of the 11-year-old boys had sex play with a seven-year-old neighbor, whose mother contacted the police. The tattletale girl was later convicted of rape for consensual sex with the 11-year-old boy.
Children were interrogated in their homes and in the local courthouse, according to Myers, with their parents present for the questioning. Parents faced the risk of prosecution or having their children taken away by the state or if they did not cooperate with authorities. District Attorney investigator William "Skip" Clancy, Jr. told the York Daily Record that he had to first allay the children's fears of law enforcement: "We assured them we didn't want them doing this when they are older. We told them the idea behind the juvenile justice system is to get them the treatment and counselling so they will not be in trouble as adults."
But after questioning them, Clancy's office sprung felony charges against the youngsters who were old enough to be tried. York County Assistant DA Marylou Erb and Clancy did not return numerous calls from The Guide. When told of the reason for calling, staffers at the DA's office refused to identify themselves. Did anyone in York County question whether childhood sex play should be regarded as criminal?
"I spoke to a sociologist or psychologist up at Penn State, and he said he didn't want to be quoted, but he thought that it's the most normal and natural thing in all the world," says Caryl Clarke of the York Daily Record. "He said that society these days frowns upon it, and that may be for the best, but that without education and a lot of watching, it's the normal way [for children] to be. In rural areas with all the farm animals around, it's even more common." Clarke says she has written only one article about the case, partly from concern of the effect of publicity on the children involved.
Richard C. Pillard, MD professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine, told The Guide he was incredulous at the prosecution. "Freud's view of the sexual nature of children was the scandal of his day," Pillard said. "No one argues for unrestrained sexual expression or sexual coercion, but have we not learned something? Have we not learned that the repression, the criminalization, of childhood sexuality, can lead to future neurotic problems for children, their families and the communities in which they live?"

Official Biographer Agrees Monty Fell In Love With Boys


by: Author Unknown,

25th February 2001


Field Marshal Montgomery, Britain's most famous second world war commander, fell in love with young boys, according to his official biographer.
Nigel Hamilton has written a book, The Full Monty, in which he claims that the man who conquered the German army in north Africa in 1942 had a passion for many boys, some not yet in their teens.
Hamilton said he had long suspected the soldier's sexual leanings but did not mention them in his earlier work - a three-part authorised biography published in the 1980s - out of respect for his subject. Now he feels compelled to tell the full story, revealed in a series of letters from Montgomery. The says he has gained access to hundreds of letters.
He now feels released from the arrangement with Montgomery's family that gave him access to material for his earlier work. That arrangement, Hamilton said, "tied my hands".
The author said he had no proof of a physical relationship between Montgomery and the many boys he befriended, though he has no doubt that he was passionately in love with them. One was Lucien Trueb, who Montgomery met in 1946 when the Swiss boy was just 12, and they corresponded over many years.
Hamilton, a visiting professor at the University of Massachusetts at Boston, says his new book, to be published this summer, has not been written to destroy but to explain the reputation of a man he regards as a "revolutionary" commander.
"I've been curious to find out why he was such a revolutionary leader. I believe his sexuality is a key. His passion for young men helped him relate to his liaison officers and young staff. He felt a real concern for their welfare," said Hamilton.
Denis Hamilton served under Montgomery during the war and afterwards became his media adviser. When he worked on The Sunday Times in the 1950s, he bought the serialisation of Montgomery's war memoirs for the paper.
Montgomery became a national figure after leading the 8th Army to victory against Rommel at El Alamein. He also took British command at D-Day and in the subsequent military push by Allied ground forces into 'Fortress Europe'.
Born in 1887, he was said to have been unhappy as a child. He had a poor relationship with his mother and his brother died when he was only 13. He served in the first world war and devoted the rest of his life to the military. Hamilton believes Montgomery's passion for young boys may have been an attempt to "reconstruct his youth".
Hamilton said he himself had "a homoerotic" relationship with Montgomery, though it was not physical. "He called me 'son number two'," said Hamilton. "But it was also not just what you might call a father-son relationship."

National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children: A Picture Of Innocence?


by: Author Unknown,

8th March 2001

This year started as last year ended: with society's obsession with child sexual abuse on an ever-upward spiral.
The year 2000 began with news of a 10-year-old boy being placed on the sexual offenders register for touching a younger girl's genitals. The summer months were taken over by news of the murder of eight-year-old Sarah Payne, and the subsequent campaign to rid housing estates of paedophiles. By the end of 2000, the UK government was attempting to resolve the 'adoption crisis' - where thousands of kids wanted to be adopted by thousands of families who wanted to adopt them, but councils and social work departments were afraid to allow it, at least in part due to concerns about how to guarantee that the families would not abuse these children.
So with the publication of a piece of research, described by one national UK newspaper as 'the most comprehensive survey of child abuse so far in the UK' , can we now put in perspective the widespread notion that child abuse is all around us? At first sight, it would seem that we can.
'Child Maltreatment in the United Kingdom', published in November 2000 by the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), questions the widespread perception that a large proportion of families - especially working-class families - are abusive. The report points out that over 90 percent of families are loving and caring, and that the difference between working-class and middle-class families, in terms of abuse, is relatively minor .
The report also challenges the belief, held by many social workers and child protection professionals, that the 'high risk' sexual abusers in the family are fathers, and especially stepfathers. 'Child Maltreatment in the UK' points out that the level of abuse among fathers and stepfathers combined is only 0.4 percent - and that slightly more natural fathers than stepfathers abuse children. (The definition for sexual abuse here, as well as including intercourse, also includes touching, hugging or kissing in a sexual way and the exposure of sexual organs.)
Interestingly, despite the current concern with what is seen as a violent macho culture among men, the NSPCC report shows that fathers are 'less violent' than mothers in their disciplining of children.
Even though the weeks following Sarah Payne's murder in July 2000 were dominated by fears about paedophiles on the prowl, the NSPCC's research also found that sexual acts between strangers and children were extremely rare, and (with the exception of exposure) were carried out by men and women in equal numbers. (As well as forced acts, this category also included consensual sexual acts with anybody five or more years older than the respondent when the respondent was under the age of 16. The report recognised that some of these sexual acts might not be seen as abusive by some - for example, if a 14-year old had consented to sex with a 19-year old.)
With police checks, social work reports, sexual offenders lists and vetting procedures generally developing across council workplaces and voluntary organisations who deal with children, it was interesting to note that, of the 2869 respondents to the NSPCC's study, none had been sexually abused in any way by a social or care worker; none had been abused by a priest or religious leader; and only nine respondents, 0.3 percent of the sample, had been sexually abused by a teacher. (Again, these figures include consensual sexual acts with anybody five or more years older than the respondent when the respondent was under the age of 16.) Part of the reason for this low figure may be that respondents might have had little contact with care workers and priests, although clearly all would have had a lot of contact with teachers.
Addressing the issue of disciplinarian families, the NSPCC report shows that freedom of expression within families is extremely high. Only two percent of respondents said they had no freedom to express their views or have them considered by their parents; one percent said they had no freedom to think and believe in what they wanted regarding, for example, politics or religion; and less than one percent said they had no freedom to meet and mix with other people.
Continuing on this theme, and despite this rather leading question - 'In the past many people found it too embarrassing to talk about sex to young people... How easy did you find it to talk to your parents about sex?' - only 16 percent said they found it very difficult. This figure provides some challenge to the image promoted by the UK government of fuddy-duddy parents, who need parenting classes to help them loosen up and talk to their kids.
Even when it comes to the currently controversial issue of whether smacking children should be considered a form of abuse, the report labels as 'questionable' the notion that smacking is part of a continuum of violence which can lead to serious abuse. The report claims that its data suggests 'a qualitative difference between the use of occasional slaps or smacks with an open hand, and violent treatment by parents, rated as seriously abusive because it caused injury or regularly had lasting physical effects' .
In all these findings, the NSPCC report seems to confirm that family life and childhood is, for the vast majority of children, anything but the abusive nightmare it is often presented to be. But this report did not lead to a call to re-examine the growing vetting of all who work with children, or a challenge to the generalised suspicion of men, which is likely to result in male primary or nursery teachers fast becoming a dying breed. The study will not mean an end to the 'stranger danger' awareness campaigns given to children in every school in the UK, and has not resulted in the NSPCC dropping its idea of child-only parks that allow adults in 'only if accompanied by a child'. Nor, I imagine, will it change the campaigns currently run by many children's charities and organisations calling for a law against smacking.
Why won't this report challenge any of these fears? Quite simply, because it was carried out by the NSPCC: an organisation that appears to spend most of its time trying to convince parents that it is not safe for our children to step outside - or even inside - their own front door. For this organisation to debunk the idea that all our children are at risk of being abused would be like the emperor admitting that he had no clothes.
If a myth was challenged in the report 'Child Maltreatment in the United Kingdom', it was highlighted only to emphasise the gravity of a different danger facing children, and the need for further professional intervention and support to prevent further abuse. So for example, the findings that social class did not make so much difference to the rate of abuse as is often assumed only led to the conclusion that middle-class families are more abusive than had previously been imagined, and that they should receive more attention from social workers.
Despite this report's finding that the incidence of child abuse seemed to be lower than many past pieces of research have claimed, and certainly lower than is often assumed by child experts and professionals, the NSPCC continued with their Happy Xmas campaign, which informed us that child abuse is all around us. And while the report concluded that the vast majority of children are not living in an abusive family, its authors emphasised that seven percent of children are seriously physically abused by their parents, and six percent are emotionally abused.
The NSPCC report is not only a highly detailed study of abuse experienced by the 2869 18 to 24-year olds in the survey. It also gives a useful overview of research on this subject from Europe and the USA. However, as the researchers for the report point out throughout, the issue of what is and is not abuse is often largely definitional and open to interpretation, depending on cultural differences and age differences. It is specifically dependent upon the methodology of researchers looking at these issues. (One study, for example, found that depending on research methods, emotional abuse has been seen to affect between 0.69 percent and 25.7 percent of the population.)
Even though the report shows the incidence of child abuse to be fairly low, these figures are questionable, as they are based on categories defined by the researchers and measurements of these categories which - as the report recognises - are often arbitrary.
The NSPCC report attempts to be scientific, in terms of categorising abuse by the type of treatment, its severity and its regularity. For example, the report classifies 'serious physical abuse', 'intermediate abuse' and 'cause for concern' by using such formulations as 'being hit on the bottom with a hard implement'. The kind of behaviour that falls into these categories would no doubt upset many good, loving parents. This is especially true for the category 'emotional abuse', which includes acts that most people would find entirely unexceptional.
The categories of emotional abuse within the report range from 'psychological controls', which include factors like 'mother unpredictable', through to 'proxy attacks', which include 'parent got rid of your pet'. Other categories include 'psycho/physical control and domination', for example 'mouth washed out with soap' (I can feel my mother cringing); 'humiliation', for example 'shouted or screamed at regularly over the years' (at least once a week - is this regular enough?); 'withdrawal', for example 'given too little attention as a child'; 'antipathy', for example 'father disliked you' (yep); and finally 'terrorising', for example 'sometimes really afraid of father/mother' (especially after I had burned down the corn field).
With questions in the emotional abuse category like 'have you been called lazy or stupid over the years by your mother?', one gets the impression that it is not only the level of parental discipline that is being scrutinised in this report. So is the amount of pressure that parents put on their children to do their homework or tidy their bedroom. And by creating tick-box categories of physical and emotional abuse in this way, the report loses any sense of the personal and family circumstances which relate to the treatment of children. The term 'child maltreatment' becomes so confused as to be almost meaningless.
Being hit on the bottom with a hard implement, for example, is one of a number of physical abuse categories that appear alongside being 'burned or scalded on purpose'. But are they really equally bad? Using a hard implement on a child's backside may be a form of discipline, or it may be done purely out of spite and cruelty. The NSPCC report assumed that, regardless of what the child has done and regardless of the reasons for the severity of the punishment, a child may be being abused. But surely a child who constantly misbehaves and is constantly punished for his actions is different from a child who never misbehaves and is regularly hurt by a parent, out of spite and malice.
Questions in the emotional abuse category include 'have you been called lazy or stupid by your mother?'
The NSPCC, an organisation whose mission is attempting to prevent *cruelty* to children, seems to have lost sight of what cruelty is. Child cruelty - a malicious, dehumanising, sadistic act - should not be acceptable to society. But whether an act is cruel or not can often only be fully understood by examining the intention of the adult who is punishing the child. By blurring the distinction between well-intentioned discipline and abuse, the NSPCC risks losing its ability to distinguish between truly cruel parents and those who simply do not comply with a child expert's tick-list of correct behaviour.
Another worrying feature of the child maltreatment report is not only that the NSPCC has lost sight of what cruelty is. This children's charity also seems to have lost sight of what it means to be a child.
Having found relatively low levels of child abuse (especially sexual abuse) by adults, an NSPCC press release explained that, in fact, the main sexual abusers were children themselves. This was the main focus of the press coverage greeting the report.
The press release laid to rest a number of popular myths about child abuse, such as 'most sex abuse occurs between father and daughter', and 'adults are responsible for most sexual violence against children and young people outside the home'. It debunked these myths with a series of counter-assertions: that 'the most likely relative to abuse within the family is a brother or stepbrother', and 'children are most likely to be forced into unwanted sexual activity by other young people, most usually from someone described as a boyfriend'.
Yet even if the survey's respondents cited brothers as the family member most often involved in sexual acts within the family, the child maltreatment report itself notes that the 'very small' numbers involved in these activities must be borne in mind when assessing these results. Unfortunately, this was not the impression given by the NSPCC's panic press release and the consequent shock-horror headlines.
When examining 'sexual abuse' among other children, the definition for sexual abuse not only includes intercourse, but also includes touching, hugging or kissing in a sexual way, the exposure of sexual organs, and being shown pornography . Parents might be concerned about all this behaviour among their children, but there is a clear difference between siblings having sex and siblings showing each other Page 3 of _The Sun_.
More importantly, the actions of a 13-year-old boy in relation to his 11-year-old sister cannot and should not be seen as comparable to the actions of a 30-year-old man. Nor should it be assumed, as it is by NSPCC director Mary Marsh, that 'such behaviour [by children] can only damage the development of her or his sexual and emotional relationships'. Siblings have flashed their genitals at each other for decades, without experiencing any lasting damage. That this behaviour is put under the media spotlight, and discussed as dirty and damaging, could have a far more negative impact on children than what used to be called 'messing about'.
The NSPCC's failure to distinguish between children and adults, and the loss of any clear analysis of intent within the actions of sexual abusers, equates the clumsy immature fumblings of children and adolescents with the actions of rapists and perverts. And when they see the next 10-year olds put on the sexual offenders register for playing doctors and nurses, we can only expect this children's charity to applaud. What 'cruelty' is the NSPCC preventing which children from, exactly?

No Touch At All


by: Author Unknown,

This is a report on a field observation of year one teachers and their students at a beach outing. It was observed at a beach near Brisbane Australia.

If anybody doubts the deleterious effects on children of the sex which hunt this has to be it! Two busloads of year one students [both girls and boys] with their teachers [both male and female] arrived at a local beach. After several hours of observation it was noted that the male teachers were NOT allowed to touch any of the children at all, whereas this did NOT apply to female teachers. When the students needed to go to the toilets, the female teachers ONLY took them, both boys and girls, to the FEMALE toilet. A huge line of kids lined up outside the toilet. Several boys remarked that they could use the MALE toilets on their own, but they were not allowed, when asked why, teachers simply said "because". One even suggested that the male teachers could take the boys to the boys toilet and the female teachers could take the girls to the girls toilet, but again this was not allowed. One wonders where this will lead?

No Evidence Of Alleged Pedophile 'Ring', Police Say


by: Author Unknown,

August 23rd 2001
A four-year investigation has concluded there is no truth to allegations a pedophile ring operated for decades in Cornwall, eastern Ontario.
The investigation, Project Truth, that saw police interview 672 people and identify 69 complainants. Some of the allegations harked back to the 1960s.
Police said yesterday there was no evidence the ring ever existed and that no further charges would be laid.
"We've done a very thorough, very extensive investigation and we feel there's nothing more to be done, unless new information comes to light," said Detective Jim Miller from provincial police headquarters in Orillia, Ont.
Police said all information they received in the case had been investigated.
"Investigators have also thoroughly reviewed and followed up on all information provided by ... a member of the Ontario legislature," a police release said.
Det. Miller said police carefully investigated allegations "that certain people were trying to cover this up," and found no such conspiracy.

Mexico Passes Anti-Child Sex Law


by: Author Unknown,

Prensa Latina, December 27, 2006

The Mexico City Legislature approved an all-embracing campaign on Wednesday against childhood sexual exploitation linked to tourism, a problem that is on the rise nationally and affects at least 5,000 minors in the Federal District.

According to the document, there are many factors contributing to

the increase of pedophilia, such as access facilities, weakness of

legal controls, inter

generational prostitution, and the huge profits

obtained from this activity.

Deputy Alejandro Ramirez declared there are municipalities in Mexico City that are considered paradises for childhood sexual tourists.

According to data from System for the Integral Development of the

Family, 50 percent of the 8,500 children on the streets in the

capital suffer from sexual abuse. Of these 8,500, 600 are under six

years of age and 70 percent have some type of addiction.

Child Abuse Study


by: Author Unknown,

August 2, 2000 Letters to the Editor

To the Editor:
Erica Goodes prompt response to the publication of the latest child abuse study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, (Childhood Abuse and Adult Stress, p. A22, Aug. 2nd) strikes of a continuation of scientific revisionism begun after the publication in 1998 of Rind, Bauserman and Tromovitch's Meta-Analysis of Child Sex Abuse Using College Samples in Psychological Bulletin, published by the American Psychological Association. That study found that a history of child sex abuse: 1) does not necessarily correlate with any permanent lasting damage; 2) often leaves no sequel; and 3) when it does, effects are greater in females than males.
That study was not reported on the day it was published and indeed not until nearly a full year later when, in response to Dr. Laura's whipping up invective, the U.S. House of Representatives in an unprecedented move voted 355-0 to condemn the scientific findings (as if scientific truth could be declared by fiat!), causing one to remember the old adage, When all think alike then no one is thinking. While that group of mostly lawyers might be excused for weighing in on a matter for which they are not qualified, what was truly unconscionable was for Psychological Bulletins editors, who purport to be scientists, to declare that they would now take social ramifications in to account when publishing research findings.
Co-author Nemeroff of the JAMA study claims this as a very large public health problem with three million reports of child abuse each year but neglects to say two million of those are deemed unfounded. And although his study only looked at women, he makes the absurd claim that there is no inherent reason why men should not show the same response. Nemeroff may be a psychiatrist but he is certainly neither a sexologist nor sexual physiologist, any one of which would tell you that male and female sexual response are very different. Such a proclamation alone causes one to question the entire study.