Publication | Open Access
Failing victims, fuelling hate: challenging the harms of the ‘Muslim grooming gangs’ narrative
72
Citations
27
References
2020
Year
Critical Race TheoryChild Sexual ExploitationGangs ’VictimologyFeminist DebateSocial SciencesViolence Against WomenGender Studies‘ MuslimAfrican American StudiesBlack Feminist TheoryOrganized CrimeFeminist ScholarshipGender-based ViolenceIntersectionalityFemale CriminalityDominant NarrativeFeminist TheorySocial MovementsFeminist MethodologiesAnti-racismRacial ViolenceSociologyOppressionMuslim Men
‘Muslim grooming gangs’ have become a defining feature of media, political and public debate around child sexual exploitation in the UK. The dominant narrative that has emerged to explain a series of horrific cases is misleading, sensationalist and has in itself promoted a number of harms. This article examines how racist framings of ‘Muslim grooming gangs’ exist not only in extremist, far-right fringes but in mainstream, liberal discourses too. The involvement of supposedly feminist and liberal actors and the promotion of pseudoscientific ‘research’ have lent a veneer of legitimacy to essentialist, Orientalist stereotypes of Muslim men, the demonisation of whole communities and demands for collective responsibility. These developments are situated in the broader socio-political context, including the far Right’s weaponisation of women’s rights, the ‘Islamophobia industry’ and a long history of racialising crime. We propose alternative ways of understanding and responding to child sexual exploitation/abuse. We contend that genuinely anti-racist feminist approaches can help in centring victims/survivors and their needs and in tackling serious sexual violence without demonising entire communities.
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