Online child sexual victimisation
Focusing on online facilitated online sexual abuse, this book takes a rigorous approach to existing literature to address some of the most pressing public and policy questions on this type of abuse. It examines which children are most vulnerable, how their vulnerability is made, what they are vulner...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Bristol
Policy Press,
2020.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover
- Online Child Sexual Victimisation
- Copyright information
- Table of contents
- List of figures and tables
- Glossary
- Notes on the authors
- Acknowledgments
- One Introduction
- What is online child sexual victimisation?
- Childhood harms online
- Naming the problem: the importance of perspective
- Is OCSV a moral panic?
- A brief guide to this book
- Note
- Two Online child sexual victimisation research
- Overview of retrieved studies
- Main data sources
- Conclusions from online child sexual victimisation research
- General conclusions
- Theoretical perspectives
- Routine activity theory
- Ecological systems theory
- Main findings from across the studies
- Research gaps
- Note
- Three Sexual practices in childhood
- Recognition of childhood sexuality
- Discourses and counter discourses
- Freud's theory of psychosexual development
- Predominance of the danger discourse
- Youth-involved sexual imagery and OCSV
- 'Sexting' prevalence
- Moving from consensual sexting to OCSV
- Request for images from adults
- Online sexual extortion and coercion
- Gendering oSCEC
- Conclusion
- Four Young children: the visibility paradox
- Introduction
- 'Olivia's story' (IWF, 2019)
- The affordances of the internet for OCSV in young children
- Volume of OCSV images of young children
- The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF)
- National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)
- Interpol and the International Child Sexual Exploitation (ICSE) database
- The visibility gap
- Nursery crimes
- Types of OCSV involving young children
- Spaces of visibility
- Identification through medical examination
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Five Vulnerability and resilience intersections
- Inherent vulnerability and resilience
- Intersectional vulnerability and resilience
- Gender
- Gender intersections
- Sexuality
- Intersectional sexualities
- Ethnicity and race
- Intersecting ethnicity to structural disadvantage
- Disability
- Disability intersections
- Relationship
- Love intersects
- Violence intersections
- Towards intersectional digital resilience to OCSV
- Notes
- Six Deepening knowledge of online child sexual victimisation
- Defining what needs to be measured
- How surveys measure OCSV
- Childhood asset protection measures
- Trust in internet systems, services and devices
- Social 'goods'
- Law enforcement and policy investigation processes
- Conclusion
- Note
- Appendix: rapid evidence assessment methodology
- Search methods
- Retrieval and coding
- Challenges and limitations
- References
- Index
- Back Cover