Child Sexual Exploitation: Why Theory Matters
Child Sexual Exploitation: Why Theory Matters
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Abstract
The issue of child sexual exploitation (CSE) is firmly in the public spotlight internationally and in the UK, but just how well is it understood? To date, many CSE-related services have been developed in reaction to high profile cases rather than being designed more strategically. This book breaks new ground by considering how psychosocial, feminist and geo-environmental theories, amongst others, can improve practice understanding and interventions. It makes the case for a more thoughtful approach to CSE prevention and a greater use of different theoretical perspectives in the development and delivery of strategies and interventions. The book is an essential text for students and those planning strategic interventions and practice activities in social, youth and therapeutic work with young people, as it supports understanding of how CSE arises and how to challenge the nature of the abuse.
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Front Matter
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1
Bringing theory home: thinking about child sexual exploitation
Jenny Pearce
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2
Moving beyond discourses of agency, gain and blame: reconceptualising young people’s experiences of sexual exploitation
Helen Beckett
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3
Child sexual exploitation, discourse analysis and why we still need to talk about prostitution
Jo Phoenix
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4
Contextual Safeguarding: theorising the contexts of child protection and peer abuse
Carlene Firmin
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5
‘Losing track of morality’: understanding online forces and dynamics conducive to child sexual exploitation
Elly Hanson
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6
Understanding adolescent development in the context of child sexual exploitation
John Coleman
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7
Some psychodynamic understandings of child sexual exploitation
Nick Luxmoore
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8
Understanding trauma and its relevance to child sexual exploitation
Kristine Hickle
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9
Social support, empathy and ecology: a theoretical underpinning for working with young people who have suffered child sexual abuse or exploitation
Pat Dolan andCaroline McGregor
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10
Using an intersectional lens to examine the child sexual exploitation of black adolescents
Claudia Bernard
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11
What’s gender got to do with it? Sexual exploitation of children as patriarchal violence
Maddy Coy
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12
Understanding models of disability to improve responses to children with learning disabilities
Emilie Smeaton
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13
Some concluding thoughts
Jenny Pearce
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End Matter
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