New Council of Europe publication on sexual abuse of children



NEW TITLE !
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Child sexual abuse in Europe (2003)
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A significant minority of children in Europe, between 10% and 20% as an 
informed scientific estimate, will be sexually assaulted during their 
childhood. This problem has been recognised by child care professionals, 
policy makers and increasingly the public at large. Debates continue about 
what can be done: how best to intervene, build confidence in the child 
protection services (CPS), which responses work and what to do about the 
perpetrators.
Child sexual abuse can take many forms including incest, prostitution, 
pornography, date rape, peer sexual violence and institutional sexual 
abuse: the sexual abuse of children by people who provide or live in 
substitute, educational or social care. All forms of child sexual abuse are 
linked because they involve children in sexual activity but to use the term 
child sexual abuse to cover all forms of sexual violence can lead to 
confusion as these activities are different in many ways, each requiring 
their own context relevant solutions.
Awareness and understanding of the problem varies from country to country. 
In some European countries awareness of child sexual abuse has inevitably 
to be seen against a backdrop of transition, major socio-economic 
difficulties, organised conflict and individual trauma that has eclipsed 
all but day to day survival. Child care professionals were beginning to 
develop awareness of sexual abuse in many of these countries in the late 
80's and early 90's but their struggles to get the problem onto a more 
public agenda had to wait until a time of greater stability. In other 
countries public awareness has continued to grow through high profile cases 
involving child abduction, murder and 'paedophiles' highlighted in the 
media. These extreme tragedies often detract from the more mundane, 
everyday experiences of child sexual abuse perpetrated by carers, 
'friends', parents and other people in a position of trust.

Most people will agree that child sexual abuse is a terrible problem, if 
they know enough about it, so what is standing in the way of effective 
solutions and why does it not appear to be reducing to any significant 
extent? These are important questions for all countries to address, whether 
they are developing new responses and initiatives or whether they are 
reviewing and evaluating established provision.


ISBN : 92-871-5118-0
Format : 16x24 cm, 245 pages
Price : 23 E / 35 US$

Available from Council of Europe Publishing - 67075 Strasbourg Cedex
E-mail : publishing@coe.int
Visit our site : http://book.coe.int
Fax : +33 (0)3 88 41 27 80

To place an order directly : http://book.coe.int/GB/CAT/LIV/HTM/l2057.htm




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