Preface by Prof. Natti Ronel
Introduction
Chapter 1: Definition, causes, and prevalence of sexual abuse
Chapter 2: Current approaches to sentencing and management
Chapter 3: Current approaches to the assessment of sexual offending
Chapter 4: Current approaches to the treatment of sexual offending
Chapter 5: Prevention strategies of sexual harm
Chapter 6: Positive criminology as an alternative
Chapter 7: Current positive criminology applications in terms of assessment
Chapter 8: Current positive criminology applications in terms of treatment and management
Chapter 9: Religion, spirituality and positive criminology
Conclusion
Stephanie Kewley is Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychology at Liverpool John Moores University. Stephanie supports, advocates, and promotes the safe and healthy functioning of marginalised and highly stigmatised populations involved in criminal justice systems.
Sarah Pemberton is Associate Professor in Criminology at Birmingham City University. Sarah's current research interests include discourse and identity management of those with convictions for sexual offences; teaching sensitive subjects and vicarious trauma; making sense of coercive control; and the media representation of intimate partner homicide.
Mohammed Rahman is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Birmingham City University. His academic work concerns serious violence - namely organised crime. Mohammed has used his teaching and research experiences to inform the public and international press about crime, harm, and crime control.
Preventing Sexual Harm provides an overview of current criminal justice strategies for tackling sexual violence, and highlights existing positive criminological approaches that could help prevent sexual abuse and harm.
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Sexual violence is a complex, multi-faceted crime. Its causes and consequences are both multiple and enduring and our understanding of sexual violence is embedded within our social, cultural, and political constructs. As such, a response to sexual violence ought to be equally complex and multi-faceted. Alternative approaches might therefore be needed, such as positive criminology. This book explores positive criminology as a mechanism to reduce the risk of recidivism, eradicate harm, prevent reoffending as well as to help reintegrate those with histories of sexual abuse back into the community. In light of recent historic cases of sexual abuse and poor institutional response to these allegations, it opens with an overview of the current landscape of sexual offending. The book then reviews the current positive criminological approaches already in existence in the effort to prevent sexual abuse by outlining the approach of positive criminology and by demonstrating the many gaps in practice that might benefit from this new way of working to prevent sexual abuse.
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By highlighting that an alternative response to sexual violence is needed, and by presenting the idea that a positive criminological paradigm is worthy of further examination, this book will be of great interest to scholars of criminology, criminal justice, and forensic psychology.