Professional's responses to child sexual abuse in the Australian Capital Territory
Date
1985
Authors
Butt, Sharyn
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between workers'
conceptualization of child sexual abuse and their handling
of such cases, using a questionnaire to elicit usual case
management, and an interview employing vignettes and
controversial statements to examine the goals of, and the
attitudes behind, case management strategies. The subjects
of this research are 60 professionals from agencies in
Canberra which deal with child sexual abuse - police,
welfare, community health centres, mental health teams,
schools and a group of non-government community agencies.
The study focusses on intrafami1ial child sexual abuse ,
being the dominant type, and having quite different dynamics
from sexual abuse of children by adults outside of the
family unit. Child sexual abuse was originally
conceptualized as a form of child maltreatment, as cases
first came to notice in investigations of other forms of
child maltreatment - notably physical abuse. More recently,
some writers have included intrafami1ial child sexual abuse
under the rubric of domestic violence, along with 'wife
bashing' and marital rape - all three being seen as an
attempt at perpetuation of the traditional patriarchal
pattern, and as symptoms of the much described 'crisis' of
the family. The effects of such disparate conceptualizations
on the intervention strategies adopted by different
professional groups, and by different agencies in Canberra,
highlights the need for a consensus of approach, not only
between different agencies, but by different professional
groups working for the same agency. The result of a
preliminary study of the incidence of reported child sexual
abuse throughout Australia is included in this report, along
with discussion of the status of national data collection,
and possible reasons for the lack of progress so far. An
'Involvement Index', developed in this study, holds promise
as an instrument for comparing the commitment and experience
levels of professionals from different agencies, whose roles
in dealing with child sexual abuse necessitate working in
quite different ways. This study shows that, although child
sexual abuse is acknowledged as a serious social problem by
workers from all agencies sampled in Canberra, exposure of
workers to these cases varies considerably amongst agencies,
with doctors and community nurses seeing few cases, and
police, welfare and mental health workers, and staff from
non-governmental community agencies, being heavily involved.
The implications of these findings are discussed, in
relation to the introduction of the proposed new Child
Welfare Ordinance (ACT).
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Thesis (Masters)
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description