Families for
Freedom, Stranger Danger.
Families for Freedom warn against too much anxiety for strangers.
Father's
horror in child sex scandal; 20th February 2007
A father has spoken for the first time of the horror of having his three daughters and two foster children removed when they were wrongly
diagnosed as sex abuse victims.
It is the 20th anniversary of what became known as the Cleveland Child Sex Abuse Scandal - but many of those innocently accused still live with
the pain of having their families torn apart.
Female
Teachers Loving Their Students - Some quotes and clippings from the
press
1) Female Teachers Accused Of Sex With Male Students Woman In
Tennessee Faces 28 Counts - NBC10, 9 Feb 2005
2) Tenn. Teacher Charged With Sexual Battery - CNN News 2 Feb 2005
3) Abuse cases face double standard - USA Today, February 11, 2005 - By
Charisse Jones
4) Florida teacher sentenced to probation, counseling - Courttv.com - February
9, 2005
Filler, Daniel M. - Terrorism, Panic and Pedophilia;
Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law, Vol. 10, No. 3 - Abstract
A new rhetoric has surfaced [...] linking terrorism, Islam and pedophilia. By connecting these concepts, moral entrepreneurs lay the groundwork for a very different response to new terrorism.
[...]
By framing Muslims as the equivalent of pedophiles, advocates may attempt to argue for such policies as the moral equivalent of sexual offender civil commitment.
This article suggests that civil rights advocates develop counter-narratives to address any such developments.
Finkelhor, David, The Prevention of Childhood Sexual Abuse;
Preventing Child Maltreatment Volume 19 Number 2 Fall 2009
David Finkelhor examines initiatives to prevent child sexual abuse, which have focused on two primary strategies: offender management and school-based educational programs. [...]
Although [offender management strategies] win approval from both the public and policy makers, little evidence exists that they are effective in preventing sexual abuse.
Moreover, these initiatives, cautions Finkelhor, are based on an overly stereotyped characterization of sexual abusers as pedophiles, guileful strangers who prey on children in public and other easy-access environments and who are at high risk to re-offend once caught.
In reality the population is much more diverse. Most sexual abusers are not strangers or pedophiles; many (about a third) are themselves juveniles. Many have relatively low risks for re-offending once caught. [...]
Finkelhor explains that school-based educational programs teach children such skills as how to identify dangerous situations, refuse an abuser’s approach, break off an interaction, and summon help.
The programs also aim to promote disclosure, reduce self-blame, and mobilize bystanders.
Considerable evaluation research exists about these programs, suggesting that they achieve certain of their goals. [...]
Finkelhor also points to evidence that supports counseling strategies both for offenders, particularly juveniles, to reduce re-offending, and for victims, to prevent negative mental health and life course outcomes associated with abuse.
Fog, A., Paraphilias and Therapy, in Nordisk
Sexulologi, 1992.
Let me introduce a new model which describes the situation of a person whose
sexual peculiarities are suppressed by the surrounding society. This model I
call the isolated minority syndrome.
|
Fog, A., Sexuelle Abweichungen und Therapie,
Nordisk Seksologi, 10-4, 1992
Hier möchte ich ein neues Modell einführen, das die Situation eines Menschen
beschreibt, deren sexuelle Eigentümlichkeiten von der umgebenden Gesellschaft
unterdrückt werden. Dieses Modell nenne ich das Syndrom der isolierten
Minderheit. |
Foggo, Daniel, Police
chief sparks row over stigma of sex with children; Sunday Times, 19
November 2006 - Leading Article: Drawing the Age Line
THE police’s leading child protection officer has said that men who have sex
with children should not be classed as “paedophiles” if the victim is
between the ages of 13 and 15 years old. [...] Only those who targeted
prepubescent children deserved to be labeled and treated as “paedophiles”.
He added that the term “child pornography” should apply only to images of
children aged below 13, for the same reason.
Fox, James Alan, Signs
of paranoia over pedophilia; MetroWest Daily News, March 5, 2006
The perception that sex offenders are untreatable is based more on fear
than fact. Sex offenders, even pedophiles, actually have a lower rate of
recidivism than most other felons, according to a U.S. Department of Justice
study of thousands of released convicts. Cured or not, many sex offenders are
able to control their impulses. So vigilance and
public notification are fine, but excessively stigmatizing sexual predators does
no one any good.
Franklin, Karen, Sex offender industry sees invasion of "hebephile" hunters;
American Chronicle, December 12, 2007
Hirschfeld
would roll over in his grave to see how his term is being used today -
in the service of involuntarily committing people to state psychiatric
hospitals. [...] This is but one of several efforts by Doren
to broaden the diagnostic categories under which sex offenders
can be civilly detained. [...]
The absurdity of describing erotic attraction to adolescents as a
mental abnormality is that most normal heterosexual men are sexually
attracted to teenage girls [...] Given the scientifically unsupported nature of this emerging
diagnosis, clinicians are likely to apply it arbitrarily, and especially
to men who are sexually involved with male teenagers.
Franz, Paul, Under Siege;
Sunday News & Lancasteronline.com, Aug 03, 2008
Tom Armstrong believes sex offenders have become the 'lepers of our society.' He believes men like the three he invited into his Mareitta
home can change. His words can't convince those protesting in front of his house.
Fraser, Doug, About
a boy; in: Student Magazine of the Otago
University in Dunedin, New Zealand, December 2004
Paedophilia.
The very word can evoke feelings of disgust and outrage. It ruins young lives,
experts claim; older men who have relationships with boys are scumbags, they
say. Indeed, a large number of such individuals are undeniably scumbags.
However, there is an emerging argument that not all man-boy relationships are
bad. Actually, claim some advocates, “boylove” can be highly beneficial to
all involved.
Frederiksen, A., Pedophilia, Science, and Self-deception, A Criticism of
Sex Abuse Research, 1999
Freely, Maureen, & Bright, Martin, Stop
being paranoid, Britain's parents told; Controversial book says
obsessive fears about children's safety are a bigger threat than bullies or
paedophiles; in The Observer, Marrch 11, 2001
A controversial new book on child-rearing to be published this week will urge
parents to let their children take more risks and stop panicking about
playground bullies and paedophiles. The book's author, Frank Furedi, Reader in
Sociology at the University of Kent, argues that parents' obsession with the
safety of their children is more damaging than the risks themselves.
Paranoid Parenting: Abandon Your Anxieties And Be A Good Parent says
parents should be wary of traditional 'child-centred' experts and urges the
Government not to meddle in the family and parenting.
French, Rose, Protestant churches report 260-plus child sex abuse cases a
year; Associated Press, USA, June 14, 2007
The three companies that insure the majority of Protestant churches in America say they typically receive upward of 260 reports each year of
young people under 18 being sexually abused by clergy, church staff, volunteers or congregation members.
Furedi, Frank, Paranoid
Parenting, published in March, 2001 by Allen Lane, Introduction.
Tony is giving up teaching. Although he would not use the words, it was
'parental paranoia' that drove him out of the West Sussex primary school where
he had taught for three years. During his teacher training, Tony had anticipated
that he might be stretched by the challenge of dealing with rowdy children. But
he was not prepared for the task of coping with 'difficult' anxious parents. The
most taxing moments of his working life were to be spent dealing with 'worried
mums'. He sighs as he tells of the mother who insisted on driving behind her
son's coach to France to ensure that he arrived safely. He wearily recalls how a
school trip to the seaside, planned for a class of 5-year-olds was cancelled
because two parents were concerned that the trip would involve their children in
a 45-minute journey in a private car. Would the cars be roadworthy? Who would
accompany a child to the lavatory? Who would ensure correct fitting seat belts?
Were these normally non-smoking cars, or would the children be made victims of
passive smoking?
Furedi, F.,
Robbing kids of their childhood and teaching parents to panic; Let children be
children and adults be adults, Living Marxism,
issue 113, September 1998
Furedi, F., Watch out,
adults about, August 1999
Our obsession with child abusers risks destroying the traditional trust between
generations.
Furedi, Frank,
History-as-Therapy;
In an era when suffering is celebrated and
we all must ‘Believe the Victim’, is it any wonder people make up
wild stories about wolves and Nazis? Spiked
Online, 5 March 2008
[...] In the current cultural climate, it is inevitable that abuse memoirs
have a tendency to stretch the boundary between fact and fiction.
Readers and critics usually feel awkward and inhibited about questioning
the veracity of such memoirs. Scepticism is discouraged in an era built
upon the therapeutic ethos ‘Believe the child’, ‘Believe the
patient’, ‘Believe the abused’ – today, such invocations are
used to sacralise the claims of victims. [...]
Through the therapeutic manipulation of memory, the trauma is lived and relived,
guaranteeing the individual the status of a morally interesting victim-for-life.
About:
Furedi, Frank, Paranoid Parenting: Abandon Your Anxieties And Be A
Good Parent:
|
Freely, Maureen, & Bright, Martin, Stop
being paranoid, Britain's parents told; Controversial book says
obsessive fears about children's safety are a bigger threat than bullies or
paedophiles; in The Observer, Marrch 11, 2001
A controversial new book on child-rearing to be published this week will
urge parents to let their children take more risks and stop panicking about
playground bullies and paedophiles. The book's author, Frank Furedi, Reader
in Sociology at the University of Kent, argues that parents' obsession with
the safety of their children is more damaging than the risks themselves.
Paranoid Parenting: Abandon Your Anxieties And Be A Good Parent says
parents should be wary of traditional 'child-centred' experts and urges the
Government not to meddle in the family and parenting. |
|
Scared silly, 14 March 2001
[...] In particular, what he noticed was that children were no longer left
to their own devices. He describes it as a "colonisation" of the
world of children by adults. As a consequence, he says, adults not only
inhabit but control the lives of children to an alarming and unhealthy
extent. |
Furedi, Frank, Thou shalt not
hug, The New Statesman (UK), 26 June 2008 - About: Frank Furedi and Jennie Bristow,
Licensed to Hug, 26 June 2008
British society no longer trusts grown-ups to interact with children. In
a controversial new report, Frank Furedi and Jennie Bristow argue that
the culture of "vetting" adults is damaging relationships between the
generations.
About
Furedi, Frank, Licensed to hug:
Gubb, James; Licensed to hug; Permalink, June 26, 2008
The dramatic escalation of child protection measures has succeeded in poisoning the relationship between the generations and creating an atmosphere of suspicion that actually increases the risks to children, according to a new study released today by
Civitas.
In Licensed to Hug Frank Furedi, Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent, argues that children need to have contact with a range of adult members of the community for their education and socialisation, but 'this form of collaboration, which has traditionally underpinned intergenerational relationships, is now threatened by a regime that insists that
adult-child encounters must be mediated through a security check'.
About:
Furedi, Frank, and Bristow, Jennie, Licensed to Hug, 26
June 2008:
Furedi, Frank, Thou shalt not
hug, The New Statesman (UK), 26 June 2008 - About: Frank Furedi and Jennie Bristow,
Licensed to Hug, 26 June 2008
British society no longer trusts grown-ups to interact with children. In
a controversial new report, Frank Furedi and Jennie Bristow argue that
the culture of "vetting" adults is damaging relationships between the
generations. |