doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200002972
Article type: Original Research
1 January 1990
Volume 15 Issue 3
doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200002972
Article type: Original Research
1 January 1990
Volume 15 Issue 3
The Sexually Abused Child: Female and Male Victims Compared
P.C. Hiller
C.R. Goddard
P.C. Hiller
C.R. Goddard
CITATION: Hiller P., & Goddard C. (1990). The Sexually Abused Child: Female and Male Victims Compared. Children Australia, 15(3), 765. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200002972
Abstract
In the last fifteen years a great deal of material has been published on child sexual abuse. All violence within the home retains a significant element of secrecy, but child sexual abuse has remained a shadowy secret longer than other forms of intra-familial assault. The battle to draw attention to physical abuse of children within the family was hard fought but controversy over child sexual abuse retains its intensity.
There are disagreements over the scale of the problem (Glaser and Frosh, 1988; Search. 1988) and the research findings concerning the effects of child sexual abuse vary ‘wildly’ (O'Hagan, 1989:53). Some myths about the problem however, have been successfully challenged. The stranger is no longer seen as the main danger and it is recognised that most perpetrators are members of the victim's immediate or extended family or known to the victim (Goddard, 1988).