Publication | Closed Access
From Freud to Feminism: Gendered Constructions of Blame Across Theories of Child Sexual Abuse
39
Citations
80
References
2017
Year
Maternal CulpabilityVictimisationSocial SciencesGender IdentitySexual OffendingViolence Against WomenGender StudiesBlame Across TheoriesHealth SciencesSexual CrimeAbuse DynamicsChild AbuseGendered ConstructionsSexual BehaviorFeminist TheorySexual AssaultSexual AbuseSociologyChild Sexual AbuseAggression
Most theories of child sexual abuse are, to some degree, gendered, with nonoffending mothers bearing the burden of blame, ideologically and legally, for the transgressions of predominantly male offenders. This article explores the social construction of blame for child sexual abuse via critical analyses of evolving theoretical perspectives on maternal culpability for the inception and maintenance of abuse dynamics. Drawing on selected conceptual and research knowledge that supports and refutes anecdotal claims, this synthesis of the literature culminates in the proposal of an evidence-informed, feminist-grounded, multitheoretical child sexual abuse framework that disrupts dominant mother-blaming discourse and guides socially just and ethically responsive policy, practice, and research.
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