[Base]
[Index]
Child Sexual Abuse - Chapter 4:
Perpetrators
David Finkelhor
The Free Press, New York, pp.33-52, 1984
There is nothing is the field of child sexual abuse more
perplexing than the question, "Why would someone molest a
child?". Although people are no longer apt to see offenders as crazed
sex fiends, they still lack some alternative framework that makes
sense for offender behavior. This chapter tries to present an
organized framework for looking at and understanding the behavior of
sex abusers.
[...]
Is Sexual Abuse Sexually Motivated?
One of the first controversies encounteres in the literature on sexual
abusers is the question of whether sexual abuse is sexually motivated.
In recent years, wirters have choosen to emphasize the nonsexual
motives involved in child sexual abuse. For example, Groth (1979,
p.146) writes that "distorted expression of identification and
affilation needs, power and control issues, and hostile and aggressive
impulses, rather than sexuality, were the underlying issue in
pedophilia." Sgroi (1982, pp.1-2) states, "Individuals who are sexual
offenders against children do not seem to be motivated primarily by
sexual desires ... it is far more appropriate to regard child sexual
abuse as a power problem.
This emphasis on sexual abuse as, in Groth's terminology,
"pseudo-sexual" behavior has been an important antidote to the
exclusive focus on sexual abuse as a "sexual deviation." We cannot
recognize the social or psychological significance of adults relating
sexually with children unless we analyze the broad emotional and
developmental meaning that such behavior has for its perpetrators.
However, to go to the other extreme and deny the sexual component
to sexual abuse, as some interpreters of Groth have done, is also a
mistake (Frude, 1982). [...]
[...] In much pedophilic-type behavior, in contrast to rape, the
evidence suggests that there is often a quite strong erotic component
(Groth, 1979), with offenders caressing, touching, and being strongly
aroused by the object of their fantasies. Many offenders have clearly
documented deviant patterns of sexual arousal and fantasy (Freund
1967a, 1967b, 1972).
[...]
In my view the debate about the sexual motivation of sexual abuse
is something of an unfortunate red herring. Sexual abuse does have a
sexual component; sometimes it is strong, sometimes weak, sometimes
primary, sometimes secondary. Along with nonsexual motivations, it
does need to be taken into account. The goal should be to explain how
the sexual conponent fits in.
Sexual Abuse and Psychopathology
Another feature of past theories about sexual abusers becomes clear as
one reads through the literature. These theories tend to emphasize
psychopathology. The dominant model is that sexual interest is a
specific deviant psychological state that afflicts a small group of
men who have had traumatizing developmental experiences (Gebhard et
al., 1965). A current incarnation of this model is the popular view
that the behovior of most sex offenders can be explained by the fact
that they tehmselves were victims of sexual abuse as children.
There may be some insight in these types of accounts. However, no
doubt they overemphasize psychopathology because they are based on
studies of a very unrepresentative population: caught and convicted
sex offenders. Caught and convicted sex offenders are those who are
the most compulsive, repetitive, blatant, and extreme in their
offending, and thus also those whose behavior stems from the most
deviant developmental experiences.
We now know much better than before how widespread sexual abuse is
and how small a fraction of offenders are ever apprehended, let alone
convicted. [...]
Need for a Multifactor Analysis
Another problem in the literature on sexual abusers is that few
theories have tried to address the full complexity of the
behavior. [...]
[...] Our reading of the literature on sexual abusers suggests
that this organizing framework consists of four separate underlying
factors that theories are attempting to explain. These appear to be
four components that contribute, in different degree and forms, to the
making of a child molester. Formulated as questions, these factors are:
- Why does a person find relating sexually to a child emotionally
gratifying and congruent.
- Why is a person capable of being sexually aroused by a child?
- Why is a person blocked in efforts to obtain sexual end
emotional gratification from more normatively approved sources?
- Why is a person not deterred by conventional social inhibitions
from having sexual relaionshhips with a child?
We call these factors "emotional congruence," "sexual arousal,"
"blockage," and "disinhibition," respectively. The first three factors
explain how a person develops a sexual interest in a child or children
in general. The last factor explains how this interest is translated
into actual behavior.
[...]
Factor 1: Emotional Congruence
[...]
Factor 2: Sexual Arousal to Children
[...]
Factor 3: Blockage
[...]
Factor 4: Disinhibition
[...]
Value of the Four Factors
[...]
Do Abuse Victims Become Abuse Perpetrators?
[...]
Explaining Different Types of Child Molesters
[...]
Sexual Preference
[...]
Exclusivity and Strength
[...]
Incest Offenders and Pedophiles
[...]
Conclusion
This chapter has introduced a typology for thinking about the sources
of child molesting with two particular goal in mind. One is to create
some order to the diverse array of ideas that have been forwarded
about molesters. Another is to illustrate how more complex models need
to be used to account for molesting behavior.
Unfortunately, no new information about child molesters is
uncoverred here. These are just old ideas packaged in a different
way. [...]