Reflective exercise: Reflections on media portrayals of sex offenders
1. What type of news media do you engage with (eg newspapers, television, internet, Twitter, etc)?
2. In the next month, note how often sex offenders are reported on and how they are described.
3. What information does this provide you and how does this influence how you think about sex offenders and sex crimes?
4. How does this information relate to your responses to the first reflective exercise earlier in this chapter?
In considering media representations of the sex offender, we note that he is generally an atypical man who is discovered to have a range of ‘deviant’ and sexually dangerous preoccupations. Where the offender is a woman, they are also portrayed as being ‘odd’, ‘abnormal’ and deviant. Offences discussed are outside of the home – in public space or within institutions (Greer, 2003; Kitzinger, 2004; Jewkes, 2011). In recent years, representations have changed slightly to accommodate the ‘celebrity sex offender’, the ‘institutional’ sex offender (particularly members of organisations with responsibilities for children, eg, churches and residential schools) and the South Asian sex offender. The offenders remain ‘outsiders’: they operate outside of domestic space, but they use their status as a vehicle for both committing and concealing their offences (Terry and Ackerman, 2008; Cowburn, 2012; Gill and Harrison, 2015).
Hayes and Baker (2014) identified six ways in which female sex offenders (FSOs) were described through media reporting: demonisation; sensationalism and titillation; minimisation and mitigation; medicalisation and psychologising; romanticising; and women as nurturers. FSOs were demonised through language that was extreme and rejecting, using emotionally charged phrases to describe both them and their behaviour. Linked to this was a sensationalism in the reporting that seemed designed to entertain the audience through explicit descriptions of the behaviours in ways that were almost pornographic in their emphasis. The rarity of these cases added to the novelty of the described behaviours. Where the abuse was same-sex, there were high levels of anger and anxiety about transgressing roles. Within the reporting, there was a theme of viewing women as accomplices of men, either coerced or emotionally dependent, which minimised their responsibility and was seen as making them less culpable. The same outcome was seen in the description of the women as having emotional or psychological problems, usually stereotypically gendered, such as depression or maladjustment. They were ‘ill’ and this was linked to their offending, including reports that these adult women were so damaged that their male child victims were viewed as the powerful ones in the abuse. Abusive incidents were also reconfigured with a ‘romantic’ angle, particularly where the victim was a male adolescent, using terms such as ‘lover’ and ‘affair’ that would be hard to imagine in contemporary descriptions if the genders were reversed. This had the effect of making the male victim complicit in his abuse, minimising any harm that may have been done to him. This was not the case where the victim was female, where anxieties about the damaging impact were heightened due to homophobia. Hayes and Baker (2014) found that descriptors of the women emphasised traditional and essentialised gender roles, such as mother and carer, which emphasised nurturing and trust. These roles were challenged by the sexually abusive behaviour and compounded the response: the women were castigated for their behaviour and for transgressing their expected roles.
Media-constructed sex offenders are outsiders, deviant and social pariahs who threaten not only potential victims, but also the domestic structures of social life (Jewkes, 2011; Galeste et al, 2012). However, this way of presenting the sex offender as a folk devil has some flaws: it does nothing to develop understanding of sex offenders or the safety of individuals and communities in relation to sex crimes. Galeste et al (2012, p 4) note that media representation of child sex offenders in the US:
fuels the public’s morbid fascination with sex offenders who target children.… Such media reports have led to national moral panics surrounding the safety of children … that has, in turn, perpetuated the acceptance of myths that run contrary to empirical knowledge about sex crimes and sex offenders.
‘Empirical knowledge about sex crimes and sex offenders’ points to most sex offenders as being ‘ordinary’ members of many communities (eg workplace, faith and geographical). Most victims of sex crimes know the person who harms them (Home Office, 2007; Bonnycastle, 2012). Sex offenders are not a group of alien beings that stand outside ‘society’ posing a threat that ‘right thinking people’ must defend. They are part of communities and, in some cases, achieve national prominence within their chosen fields of work; they are an ever-changing and disparate group of people. We explore issues relating to knowledge about people who commit sex offences in Chapter Two.
There are many ways in which to understand sexually harmful behaviours. However, in this case, a moral panic perspective does not offer greater insights. Moreover, the ‘folk devil’ sex offender is clearly a ‘hyperbolic’ construction that conceals the more commonplace sex offender. Building penal policies and social work practice on the basis of moral panics caused by the sex offender as folk devil ignores the need for wider community safety/public health approaches to preventing sex crimes. In the chapters that follow, we show that ‘moral panic’-driven penal policies, such as the sex offender register and public notification, are not making much of a contribution to challenging the underlying causes of sex crimes and, thus, developing safer communities. Without critical interrogation, folk devil mythologies and moral panics in relation to sex crimes will continue to contribute to wider societal denial of the commonplace nature of sex crimes. It is to the phenomenon of denial that we now turn.
Understanding denial
This section focuses on three different types of denial that while they may be interlinked, also have their own distinctive characteristics; all of them, in various ways, affect how we understand and respond to sex offenders. They are: worker denial, societal denial and offender denial. Before exploring each of these aspects, it is helpful to consider a wider definition of denial. The online Oxford English dictionary (OED, 2015) offers (among others) this definition of denial: ‘Refusal to acknowledge a person or thing as having a certain character or certain claims; a disowning, disavowal’.
While this definition is general in character, it captures the essence of denial across all three types; all of them would reject the ‘certain character’ of a sex offender or the threat of sexual danger. The OED (2015) also offers another pertinent definition: ‘Psychoanal. The suppression (usu. at an unconscious level) of a painful or unacceptable wish or of experiences of which one is ashamed. Now also in more general use, esp. in phr. in denial’. This particular focus is relevant to both workers and offenders; it acknowledges psychological ways of coping with difficult and painful experiences through suppressing any recognition of them.
Worker denial
We suggest that worker denial (of abuse, of harm to children, vulnerable adults and to self) may be rooted in both the anticipation and the actuality of direct work. It has two dimensions: cognitive and emotive. Cognitively, some social work assessments may ignore signs of abuse and trauma or reinterpret them. Emotively, denial represents a failure to recognise the emotional impact of the work. Listening to and/or reading graphic descriptions of sexual harms inflicted upon victims, children and adults is an intellectually and emotionally challenging task (see later). Perhaps the most serious consequence of worker denial is that victims may be left in vulnerable situations and offenders and offending may be ignored.
Societal denial
Societal denial of sexual offending is the failure of governments to recognise the extent of sexually harmful behaviours in the wider population and the harmful impacts of such crimes on victims, families and communities. Cohen (2001, p 1) identifies three forms of denial: literal denial (nothing happened),