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Perceptions of child sexual abuse in a hypothetical cybersexploitation case : the importance of perpetrator honesty, outcome type, and respondent gender.
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Perceptions of child sexual abuse in a hypothetical cybersexploitation case : the importance of perpetrator honesty, outcome type, and respondent gender.

M Davies, Paul Rogers and Paul A. Hood
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, Vol.18(4), pp.422-441
2009

Abstract

Psychology
This study investigated perceptions of child sexual abuse in a hypothetical cybersexploitation case. Men were predicted to be more negative toward the victim than were women. Victims were predicted to be more negatively judged when they consented to sex than when they did not and when they were lied to than when they were not. Two hundred and seventy-six respondents read a sexual abuse depiction in which the perpetrator's disclosure about his age (being honest from the outset, lying, or refusing to disclose when questioned) and the final outcome of the meeting (consensual verses nonconsensual sexual intercourse) were varied between subjects. Respondents then completed a 17-item attribution scale. ANOVAs revealed broad support for the predictions. Results have implications for education about cybercrime.
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