A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse

Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a human rights issue of interest to both science and society. Many CSA offenders are paedophiles. It follows that a thorough understanding of paedophilia is apposite. Unfortunately, there is disagreement in the literature about paedophilia. This may be because the group i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Verrijdt, Andrew
Other Authors: Foster, D H
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Humanities 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30849
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-308492020-07-22T05:08:06Z A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse Verrijdt, Andrew Foster, D H Psychology Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a human rights issue of interest to both science and society. Many CSA offenders are paedophiles. It follows that a thorough understanding of paedophilia is apposite. Unfortunately, there is disagreement in the literature about paedophilia. This may be because the group is not homogenous. To address this, studies have attempted to construct typologies. However, these suffered from methodological limitations including participant-dishonesty, difficulty in maintaining participant anonymity, small sample sizes and the tendency of clinicians to influence data. The current study attempts to address these. It examines a population of self-identified paedophiles who operated under a high degree of anonymity on a pair of websites (the “Pedophile Support Community”, and “Hurt 2 the Core”) that were hidden on the “dark internet” and accessible only via the anonymizing web browser “TOR”. The study qualitatively analyses participant discussions. Using the principles of grounded theory, it attempts to describe, compare and contrast the two sites’ users, with a view to identifying taxonomic distinctions. Most members of the first site used the platform to construct an identity, using cognitive distortions, that was more favourable to them than the one imposed by society. This was largely informed by the notion that child sexual abuse needn’t be harmful. Others eschewed child sexual abuse, preferring to satisfy their urges by viewing indecent images of children. These subtypes contrast to those who occupied the second site, who sought to enact both paedophilic and sadistic fantasies. The attitudes and actions of the sites' participants led to the construction of a proposed typology of potential child abusers. A distinction between ‘pedosexuals’ and ‘pedosadists’ is proposed. Whilst both are attracted to children, the latter is specifically aroused on the basis of violence (or thoughts of violence) against children, whilst the former explicitly is not. This distinction has implications for societal responses, vis a vis treatment, legal measures and theory. 2020-01-31T11:04:57Z 2020-01-31T11:04:57Z 2019 2020-01-24T08:17:30Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30849 eng application/pdf Faculty of Humanities Department of Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Verrijdt, Andrew
A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
description Child sexual abuse (CSA) is a human rights issue of interest to both science and society. Many CSA offenders are paedophiles. It follows that a thorough understanding of paedophilia is apposite. Unfortunately, there is disagreement in the literature about paedophilia. This may be because the group is not homogenous. To address this, studies have attempted to construct typologies. However, these suffered from methodological limitations including participant-dishonesty, difficulty in maintaining participant anonymity, small sample sizes and the tendency of clinicians to influence data. The current study attempts to address these. It examines a population of self-identified paedophiles who operated under a high degree of anonymity on a pair of websites (the “Pedophile Support Community”, and “Hurt 2 the Core”) that were hidden on the “dark internet” and accessible only via the anonymizing web browser “TOR”. The study qualitatively analyses participant discussions. Using the principles of grounded theory, it attempts to describe, compare and contrast the two sites’ users, with a view to identifying taxonomic distinctions. Most members of the first site used the platform to construct an identity, using cognitive distortions, that was more favourable to them than the one imposed by society. This was largely informed by the notion that child sexual abuse needn’t be harmful. Others eschewed child sexual abuse, preferring to satisfy their urges by viewing indecent images of children. These subtypes contrast to those who occupied the second site, who sought to enact both paedophilic and sadistic fantasies. The attitudes and actions of the sites' participants led to the construction of a proposed typology of potential child abusers. A distinction between ‘pedosexuals’ and ‘pedosadists’ is proposed. Whilst both are attracted to children, the latter is specifically aroused on the basis of violence (or thoughts of violence) against children, whilst the former explicitly is not. This distinction has implications for societal responses, vis a vis treatment, legal measures and theory.
author2 Foster, D H
author_facet Foster, D H
Verrijdt, Andrew
author Verrijdt, Andrew
author_sort Verrijdt, Andrew
title A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
title_short A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
title_full A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
title_fullStr A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
title_full_unstemmed A proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
title_sort proposed typology for paedophilia: a grounded theory analysis of online discourse
publisher Faculty of Humanities
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30849
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