| Literature DB >> 30654505 |
Hannah L Merdian1, Derek E Perkins2, Stephen D Webster3, Darragh McCashin4.
Abstract
The phenomenon of men who travel across international borders to engage in child sexual abuse presents significant public health, legal, diplomatic, cultural, and research challenges. Briefed in the current scope of this issue by relevant stakeholders across legislation, research, and social policy, a roundtable discussion held in London aimed to synthesise plenary discussions from multidisciplinary attendees across law enforcement, academia, non-profit, and industry sectors with direct relevance to the UK. Specifically, the roundtable discussions aimed to gather the central themes relating to attendee discussions on the key challenges, affected countries, response strategies, and knowledge gaps. Four key themes were identified from the data, relating to the definition of Transnational Child Sexual Abuse (TCSA), criminal justice, geographical considerations, and issues surrounding tourism/hospitality. The data highlighted four priorities for future development and research, namely developing offender typologies, victim-centric investigative practice, prevalence and definitions, and collaborations. These themes provide insight into the issue of transnational child sexual abuse from the perspective of different disciplines and offer a strategy to prioritise, and collaborate, in the efforts against transnational child sexual abuse.Entities:
Keywords: child sexual abuse; child sexual exploitation; transnational child sexual abuse; travelling offender
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30654505 PMCID: PMC6352229 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16020243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Identified research questions, prioritised by the group (frequency rating).
| Theme | Research Question | Priority Ranking |
|---|---|---|
| Offending Behaviour | How do offenders know to go to certain locations/distribution channels? | 7 |
| Victim Safeguarding | What support is available to children/victims in affected countries (e.g., safe housing, psychological support, compensation)? | 6 |
| Victim Safeguarding | In cases of compensation, how can we ensure there is no meta-abuse of the victim, and how can policy ensure such accountability? | 5 |
| Victim Safeguarding | In some countries, victims of child sexual abuse may be seen as criminally liable (differences in legislation between countries); issue of victim blaming/stigma surrounding victimisation, and power | 5 |
| Offending Behaviour | What types of transnational child sexual abuse exists? | 5 |
| Offending Behaviour | What are the profiles of perpetrators in-country vs. foreign visitors (travelling sex offenders)? How do live-streaming offences fit in? | 5 |
| Culturally-Sensitive Responding | Western way of thinking in a non-Western problem—how can we think/act globally? | 4 |
| Offending Behaviour | What is the impact of online child sexual abuse, networking, and travelling on contact sex offending? | 4 |
| Victim Safeguarding | Can you do research with the child victim? What are the consequences to the child? What are their perceptions of the help provided? | 3 |
Figure 1Thematic summary of overall priorities identified at the roundtable discussion.