Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?

Purpose: This study explores how the decision to disclose Childhood Sexual Abuse (CSA) to the legal setting for adult victims is perceived by key informants, specifically factors that are believed to facilitate or prevent legal disclosure from occurring. Background: Prevalence rates of CSA are high...

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Main Author: Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth
Published: University of Glasgow 2016
Subjects:
345
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695136
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6951362018-04-04T03:10:47ZLegal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth2016Purpose: This study explores how the decision to disclose Childhood Sexual Abuse (CSA) to the legal setting for adult victims is perceived by key informants, specifically factors that are believed to facilitate or prevent legal disclosure from occurring. Background: Prevalence rates of CSA are high (Pereda, Guilera, Forns & Gomez-Benito, 2009) and the negative consequences caused by the abuse acknowledged (Filipas & Ullman, 2006). Disclosure of this crime is understood to be complex and delayed disclosure recognised (Arata, 1998) but little is known about disclosure to the legal system. Rates of legal disclosure of CSA remain low and the attrition rates high (London, Bruck, Ceci & Shuman, 2005), but investigation and understanding of the contributory factors is rare. Disclosure of CSA to the legal system enables prosecution of the abuser and protection of the victim and others. Method: 10 “key informants” consisting of specialised clinicians working with adult victims of CSA were interviewed. Each informant completed an indepth interview exploring their beliefs about factors that facilitated or prevented adult victims of CSA from disclosing their experience to the legal system. Interviews were transcribed and the qualitative data subjected to Thematic Analysis. Conclusions: Two super-ordinate themes (Legal Disclosures Are Rare: “Why would they do that?” and The Anomalies: Acknowledging that this is a crime) and four sub-ordinate themes emerged from the analysis and an analytical narrative constructed. Themes emphasised the rarity of legal disclosure and the significant number of barriers adult victims of CSA perceive. Implications for clinical practice and future research are outlined.345BF PsychologyUniversity of Glasgowhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695136http://theses.gla.ac.uk/7582/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 345
BF Psychology
spellingShingle 345
BF Psychology
Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth
Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
description Purpose: This study explores how the decision to disclose Childhood Sexual Abuse (CSA) to the legal setting for adult victims is perceived by key informants, specifically factors that are believed to facilitate or prevent legal disclosure from occurring. Background: Prevalence rates of CSA are high (Pereda, Guilera, Forns & Gomez-Benito, 2009) and the negative consequences caused by the abuse acknowledged (Filipas & Ullman, 2006). Disclosure of this crime is understood to be complex and delayed disclosure recognised (Arata, 1998) but little is known about disclosure to the legal system. Rates of legal disclosure of CSA remain low and the attrition rates high (London, Bruck, Ceci & Shuman, 2005), but investigation and understanding of the contributory factors is rare. Disclosure of CSA to the legal system enables prosecution of the abuser and protection of the victim and others. Method: 10 “key informants” consisting of specialised clinicians working with adult victims of CSA were interviewed. Each informant completed an indepth interview exploring their beliefs about factors that facilitated or prevented adult victims of CSA from disclosing their experience to the legal system. Interviews were transcribed and the qualitative data subjected to Thematic Analysis. Conclusions: Two super-ordinate themes (Legal Disclosures Are Rare: “Why would they do that?” and The Anomalies: Acknowledging that this is a crime) and four sub-ordinate themes emerged from the analysis and an analytical narrative constructed. Themes emphasised the rarity of legal disclosure and the significant number of barriers adult victims of CSA perceive. Implications for clinical practice and future research are outlined.
author Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth
author_facet Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth
author_sort Morrison, Sarah Elizabeth
title Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
title_short Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
title_full Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
title_fullStr Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
title_full_unstemmed Legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
title_sort legal disclosure of childhood sexual abuse : what can professionals tell us?
publisher University of Glasgow
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.695136
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