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Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest

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Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest. / Soothill, Keith L.; Francis, Brian J.
In: Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, Vol. 24, No. 1, 02.2002, p. 1-17.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Soothill, KL & Francis, BJ 2002, 'Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest', Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, vol. 24, no. 1, pp. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1080/09649060110112659

APA

Vancouver

Soothill KL, Francis BJ. Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest. Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law. 2002 Feb;24(1):1-17. doi: 10.1080/09649060110112659

Author

Soothill, Keith L. ; Francis, Brian J. / Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest. In: Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law. 2002 ; Vol. 24, No. 1. pp. 1-17.

Bibtex

@article{9f76ae545dd4477a89b68e1b91cc598b,
title = "Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest",
abstract = "A 'moral panic' about child sexual abuse in Britain in the 1980s culminated in 'the Cleveland affair' that produced the challenge of widespread incest and sexual abuse within families. This paper considers the aftermath of this 'moral panic'. The main focus is on the offenders convicted of incest during the years 1988-96 inclusive, with comparative data from an earlier 1973 cohort. A shift in the incest offender profile is demonstrated. The aftermath of this 'moral panic'seems to have been to the detriment of incest victims who now seem less likely to speak or be heard. The findings are considered in the light of recent recommendations on changing the law on incest in the Home Office consultation paper, 'Setting the Boundaries: reforming the law on sex offences' (2000). The authors endorse the view that the offence of incest should be revised, but are concerned whether the use of the criminal justice system will be any more successful when a sexual activity which is currently narrowly proscribed is more widely proscribed.",
keywords = "child abuse, incest, moral panic",
author = "Soothill, {Keith L.} and Francis, {Brian J.}",
year = "2002",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1080/09649060110112659",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1--17",
journal = "Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law",
issn = "0964-9069",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Moral panics and the aftermath: a study of incest

AU - Soothill, Keith L.

AU - Francis, Brian J.

PY - 2002/2

Y1 - 2002/2

N2 - A 'moral panic' about child sexual abuse in Britain in the 1980s culminated in 'the Cleveland affair' that produced the challenge of widespread incest and sexual abuse within families. This paper considers the aftermath of this 'moral panic'. The main focus is on the offenders convicted of incest during the years 1988-96 inclusive, with comparative data from an earlier 1973 cohort. A shift in the incest offender profile is demonstrated. The aftermath of this 'moral panic'seems to have been to the detriment of incest victims who now seem less likely to speak or be heard. The findings are considered in the light of recent recommendations on changing the law on incest in the Home Office consultation paper, 'Setting the Boundaries: reforming the law on sex offences' (2000). The authors endorse the view that the offence of incest should be revised, but are concerned whether the use of the criminal justice system will be any more successful when a sexual activity which is currently narrowly proscribed is more widely proscribed.

AB - A 'moral panic' about child sexual abuse in Britain in the 1980s culminated in 'the Cleveland affair' that produced the challenge of widespread incest and sexual abuse within families. This paper considers the aftermath of this 'moral panic'. The main focus is on the offenders convicted of incest during the years 1988-96 inclusive, with comparative data from an earlier 1973 cohort. A shift in the incest offender profile is demonstrated. The aftermath of this 'moral panic'seems to have been to the detriment of incest victims who now seem less likely to speak or be heard. The findings are considered in the light of recent recommendations on changing the law on incest in the Home Office consultation paper, 'Setting the Boundaries: reforming the law on sex offences' (2000). The authors endorse the view that the offence of incest should be revised, but are concerned whether the use of the criminal justice system will be any more successful when a sexual activity which is currently narrowly proscribed is more widely proscribed.

KW - child abuse

KW - incest

KW - moral panic

U2 - 10.1080/09649060110112659

DO - 10.1080/09649060110112659

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 1

EP - 17

JO - Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law

JF - Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law

SN - 0964-9069

IS - 1

ER -