Article type: Original Research
21 May 2014
Volume 39 Issue 2
Article type: Original Research
21 May 2014
Volume 39 Issue 2
Blurred Lines? Responding to ‘Sexting’ and Gender-based Violence among Young People
Anastasia Powell1 *
Nicola Henry2
Affiliations
1 RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
2 La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Correspondence
* Anastasia Powell
Contributions
Anastasia Powell -
Nicola Henry -
Anastasia Powell1 *
Nicola Henry2
Affiliations
1 RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
2 La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Correspondence
* Anastasia Powell
CITATION: Powell A., & Henry N. (2014). Blurred Lines? Responding to ‘Sexting’ and Gender-based Violence among Young People. Children Australia, 39(2), 1915. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2014.9
Abstract
The emerging phenomenon of youth ‘sexting’ presents a range of unique legal, policy and educative challenges. In this article we consider four key issues in recent responses to youth sexting behaviours: (1) the definitional dilemmas surrounding the term ‘sexting’; (2) the inadequacy of existing legislative frameworks for responding to these behaviours; (3) the problematic messages conveyed in anti-sexting campaigns; and (4) the relative silence around gender-based violence in non-consensual and abusive encounters. We argue that the non-consensual creation and distribution of sexual images has largely been framed in public debates as a problem of youth naiveté, with the effect of censuring young women's ‘risky’ sexual behaviour, and leaving unproblematised gender-based violence. We suggest that more nuanced understandings of sexting that distinguishes between the consensual and non-consensual creation and distribution of sexual images must inform legal, policy and education-based prevention responses to the misuse of new technologies.