Child Sexual Abuse, Disclosure and Reintegration: Too Late or Too Soon.
There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Autor*in: |
Ifeyinwa Mbakogu [verfasserIn] Lotanna Odiyi [verfasserIn] |
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E-Artikel |
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Sprache: |
Englisch |
Erschienen: |
2023 |
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Schlagwörter: |
non-disclosure of sexual abuse child trafficking and child labour |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
In: Journal of Social Work Education and Practice - Social Workers in India, 2018, 6(2023), 3 |
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Übergeordnetes Werk: |
volume:6 ; year:2023 ; number:3 |
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(DE-627)DOAJ090975553 (DE-599)DOAJ46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng HV1-9960 Ifeyinwa Mbakogu verfasserin aut Child Sexual Abuse, Disclosure and Reintegration: Too Late or Too Soon. 2023 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. child sexual abuse non-disclosure of sexual abuse child trafficking and child labour Ubuntu and African centred perspective reintegration peer influence Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology Lotanna Odiyi verfasserin aut In Journal of Social Work Education and Practice Social Workers in India, 2018 6(2023), 3 (DE-627)1760625973 (DE-600)3071028-5 24562068 nnns volume:6 year:2023 number:3 https://doaj.org/article/46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 kostenfrei https://jswep.in/index.php/jswep/article/view/112 kostenfrei https://doaj.org/toc/2456-2068 Journal toc kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_A SYSFLAG_A GBV_DOAJ AR 6 2023 3 |
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(DE-627)DOAJ090975553 (DE-599)DOAJ46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng HV1-9960 Ifeyinwa Mbakogu verfasserin aut Child Sexual Abuse, Disclosure and Reintegration: Too Late or Too Soon. 2023 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. child sexual abuse non-disclosure of sexual abuse child trafficking and child labour Ubuntu and African centred perspective reintegration peer influence Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology Lotanna Odiyi verfasserin aut In Journal of Social Work Education and Practice Social Workers in India, 2018 6(2023), 3 (DE-627)1760625973 (DE-600)3071028-5 24562068 nnns volume:6 year:2023 number:3 https://doaj.org/article/46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 kostenfrei https://jswep.in/index.php/jswep/article/view/112 kostenfrei https://doaj.org/toc/2456-2068 Journal toc kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_A SYSFLAG_A GBV_DOAJ AR 6 2023 3 |
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(DE-627)DOAJ090975553 (DE-599)DOAJ46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng HV1-9960 Ifeyinwa Mbakogu verfasserin aut Child Sexual Abuse, Disclosure and Reintegration: Too Late or Too Soon. 2023 Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. child sexual abuse non-disclosure of sexual abuse child trafficking and child labour Ubuntu and African centred perspective reintegration peer influence Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology Lotanna Odiyi verfasserin aut In Journal of Social Work Education and Practice Social Workers in India, 2018 6(2023), 3 (DE-627)1760625973 (DE-600)3071028-5 24562068 nnns volume:6 year:2023 number:3 https://doaj.org/article/46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 kostenfrei https://jswep.in/index.php/jswep/article/view/112 kostenfrei https://doaj.org/toc/2456-2068 Journal toc kostenfrei GBV_USEFLAG_A SYSFLAG_A GBV_DOAJ AR 6 2023 3 |
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There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. |
abstractGer |
There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. |
abstract_unstemmed |
There is a lot of news reporting in Nigeria on the sexual abuse of children, especially the female child. Several of these abuses occur during domestic work or in children’s family homes with perpetrators who could be close family members (parents, siblings or distant relatives), friends, neighbours, teachers or strangers. Bearing in mind that child sexual abuse is a social issue that could benefit from a more nuanced understanding of the problem, children facing sexual abuse are better positioned to provide critical insight into their diverse experiences and triggers of the problem. It is essential to speak to affected children to understand factors reinforcing their abuse and the nature of resources available and desired by them for effective reintegration or adjustment after exiting protection offered by anti-trafficking shelters. The paper interacts with African Centred approaches as studies indicate that the peculiarities of the African culture manifested in Ubuntu, have a significant effect on the incidence and disclosure rates of child sexual abuse in Africa, the recently instituted Nigeria Sex Offender’s Registry, and children’s diverse narratives for a critical discussion on the problem. Several themes generated from the findings highlight the link between child labour and child susceptibility to sexual abuse. The findings also indicate the trauma of disbelief, stigma, culture of silence or lack of disclosure surrounding and reinforcing children’s encounter with sexual exploitation. These narratives limit the nature of children’s reintegration with families after disclosure of sexual experiences and should shape the direction of interactions for addressing children’s problems. |
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Child Sexual Abuse, Disclosure and Reintegration: Too Late or Too Soon. |
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https://doaj.org/article/46154cb640e246faaa9cb908385e2114 https://jswep.in/index.php/jswep/article/view/112 https://doaj.org/toc/2456-2068 |
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