Children as 'risk' : sexual exploitation and abuse by children and young people /
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Author / Creator: | McAlinden, Anne-Marie, author. |
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Imprint: | Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2018. |
Description: | 1 online resource |
Language: | English |
Series: | Cambridge studies in law and society Cambridge studies in law and society. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12576343 |
Table of Contents:
- Cover; Half-title page; Series page; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; Acknowledgements; Part I The Theoretical and Policy Context; 1 Conceptualising Children as 'Risk': An Introduction; Defining Terms; Public and Official Discourses on Sexual Offending Concerning Children; Framing the Debates; A Brief Note on the Primary Research; Recurrent Themes; Structure of the Book; 2 Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse: A Contemporary History of Concerns; The Early Emergence of Child Abuse: Intra-familial Abuse; Extrafamilial Abuse: The Predatory Stranger; Institutional Child Abuse
- Online Grooming and AbuseChild Sexual Exploitation; Conclusion; 3 The Social and Political Construction of Sexual Offending Concerning Children; Conceptualising Childhood; Sex, Sexuality and the Sexualisation of Children and Young People; Hierarchies of Blame: Sexual Offending and Victimisation Concerning Children; Children at 'Risk' and the Relevance of Children's Rights; Conclusion; Part II Children as 'Risk': Children and Young People Who Display Harmful Sexual or Exploitative Behaviour; 4 The Emergence of Harmful Sexual Behaviour; The Emergence of the Problem
- The Media and a 'Culture of Sex''New Media': Social Media, Mobile Phones and Changing Modes of Communication; Changes in Dating and Courting Rituals: The 'Third Hand Removal of Emotion'; Access to Pornography: 'Two or Three Clicks Away'; 'Corporate Paedophilia': Video Games and Music Videos as 'Pornography'; 'Gang' or 'Partying Culture'; The Experiential Sexualisation of Children; Gender and Sexual Identity; Resilience; Normalisation and the 'New Normal'; Conclusion; 5 Peer-to-Peer Grooming: A Reappraisal; Contextualising Peer-to-Peer Grooming
- Similarities: Problems in Defining Scope and Pinpointing IntentionDifferences: Proximity and Speed; Power and Control; Vulnerability; The Exploitation of Personal and Social Contexts; Trust and Normalisation; Entrapment; Conclusion; 6 The Nature and Scope of Peer-to-Peer Exploitation and Abuse: Towards a Typology of 'Harm'; The Nature and Extent of Peer Abuse; Age; Gender; The 'Dark Figure' of Peer-Based Abuse; A Taxonomy of Peer-to-Peer Abuse; Sibling Abuse; Peer-to-Peer Forms of Institutional Abuse; Peer-to-Peer Online Abuse: Sexting and Cyberbullying
- Peer-Based Child Sexual Exploitation: 'Line Ups'Partying Culture: 'Chemsex Parties'; Conclusion; 7 Legal and Societal Responses to 'Risk'; Legislative and Policy Responses; The (De)Criminalisation of Sexting; The 'Confusion of Years': Age-Based Anomalies Within Legislative Frameworks; Evidential and Practical Difficulties in Investigating and Prosecuting HSB: Intention and Consent; System Tensions; Societal and Familial Responses to Risk; Cultural Dimensions of HSB; Familial Responses; Conclusion; Part III Future Approaches; 8 Conclusion: Reimagining 'Risk'; Moving Beyond 'Risk'