There are a range of useful and illuminating analyses of the media construction of organized abuse as it became front-page news in the 1980s and 1990s (Kit zinger 2004, At more 1997, Kelly 1998), but this book is focused on organized abuse as a criminal practice; as well as a discursive object of study, debate and disagreement. These two dimensions of this topic are inextricably linked because precisely where and how organized abuse is reported to take place is an important determinant of how it is understood. Prior to the 1980s, the predominant view of the police, psychiatrists and other authoritative professionals was that organized abuse occurred primarily outside the family where it was committed by extra-familial ‘pedophiles’. This conceptualization; of organized abuse has received enduring community support to the present day, where concerns over children’s safety is often framed in terms of their vulnerability to manipulation by ‘pedophiles’ and ‘sex rings’. This view dovetails more generally with the medico-legal and media construction of the ‘pedophile as an external threat to the sanctity of the family and community (Cow burn and Nominally 2001) but it is confounded by evidence that organized abuse and other forms of serious sexual abuse often originates in the home or in institutions, such as schools and churches, where adults have socially legitimate authority over children.
— Michael Salter
Organised Sexual Abuse
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