Like the psychological model outlined above, the psychiatric understanding of organised paedophilia is a framework that is focused primarily on individual psychological factors and overlooks the role of violence in criminal groups and the contexts in which such groups emerge. The underlying assumption of literature on organised paedophilia is that members of sexually abusive groups are motivated by a pathological sexual interest in children but this does not accord with evidence that suggests that abusive groups can simultaneously abuse children and women. It is increasingly recognised that sexual offenders may not specialise in one particular victim category, and a significant proportion of child sexual abusers have also offended against adults (Cann et al. 2007, Heil et al. 2003). Furthermore, many of the behaviours of abusive groups appear to be designed to elicit fear and pain from the victim rather than to generate sexual pleasure for the perpetrator per se., are not mutually exclusive, but there is a sadistic dimension to organised abuse that is not explicable as paedophilic. A survivor of organised abuse from Belgium, Regina Louf, made this point clearly when she said: I find the expression paedophile network misleading. For me paedophiles are those men who go to playgrounds or swimming pools, priestsI certainly don't want to exonerate them, but I would rather have paedophiles than the types we were involved with. There were men who never touched the children. Whether you were five, ten, or fifteen didnt matter. What mattered to them was sex, power, experience. To do things they would never have tried with their own wives. Among them were some real sadists. (Louf quoted in Bulte and de Conick 1998) A credible theoretical account of organised abuse must necessarily (a) account for the available empirical evidence of organised abuse, (b) address the complex patterns of abuse and violence evident in sexually abusive groups, and (c) explain the ways in which sexually abusive groups form in a range of contexts, including families and institutions.

About This Quote

About Michael Salter, Organised Sexual Abuse

Michael Salter, Organised Sexual Abuse.

Themes

  • Power — The dynamics of influence, authority, and leadership

More quotes by Michael Salter, Organised Sexual Abuse

Related Quotes