Publication | Open Access
Child Grooming and Sexual Exploitation: Are South Asian Men the UK Media’s New Folk Devils?
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2015
Year
Critical Race TheoryMay 2012South Asian MenHomosexualityQueer TheoryMasculinitySocial SciencesNew Folk DevilsSexual CulturesSexual OffendingViolence Against WomenGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesHealth SciencesSexual CrimeCommercial SexSexual ViolenceGender-based ViolenceIntersectionalityFemale CriminalitySexual BehaviorFeminist TheoryAnti-racismCultureSexuality StudiesSexual AbuseSociologyGroomingChild GroomingCultural AnthropologySexual Exploitation
In May 2012, nine men from the Rochdale area of Manchester were found guilty of sexually exploiting a number of underage girls. Media reporting on the trial focused on the fact that eight of the men were of Pakistani descent, while all the girls were white. Framing similar cases in Preston, Rotherham, Derby, Shropshire, Oxford, Telford and Middlesbrough as ethnically motivated, the media incited moral panic over South Asian grooming gangs preying on white girls. While these cases shed light on the broader problem of sexual exploitation in Britain, they also reveal continuing misconceptions that stereotype South Asian men as ‘natural’ perpetrators of these crimes due to culturally-specific notions of hegemonic masculinity. Examining newspaper coverage from 2012 to 2013, this article discusses the discourse of the British media’s portrayal of South Asian men as perpetrators of sexual violence against white victims, inadvertently construing ‘South Asian men’ as ‘folk devils’.
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