Examines debate on sexuality and sexual morality, focusing on sexual attraction of adults to pre-pubescent and pubescent children, and sex between adults and minors. Distinguishes between varieties of male homosexuality, including "pederasty", sexual attraction of adult men to boys and "ephebophilia", sexual attraction of adult men to post-pubescent, sexually mature youths.
Frontmatter -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Tables -- Figures -- PART ONE: INTRODUCTION -- Introduction -- PART TWO: PEDOPHILIA -- 1. The Nature of the Deviation -- 2. The Object and the Act -- 3. The Offender -- 4. Legal and Criminological Factors -- 5. Clinical and Correctional Factors -- 6. Sentence and Disposition -- PART III: EXHIBITIONISM -- 7. The Nature of the Deviation -- 8. The Object and the Act -- 9. The Offender -- 10. Legal and Criminological Factors -- 11. Clinical and Correctional Factors -- 12. Sentence and Disposition -- Appendixes -- Bibliography -- Index of Names
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Data from 22 cases of deaf individuals suffering from pedophilia are presented along with a tabular summary of recent articles from the deaf press, about deaf victims of pedophilia and deaf pedophiles. Results indicate a number of factors that distinguish deaf pedophiles from hearing pedophiles. First is the prevalence of Primitive Personality Disorder in the deaf group. Corollary to this, with a significant number of pedophiles, competence to stand trial is a major issue. Other significant differences include a high rate of brain damage, illiteracy, poor communication skills, and other psychiatric illnesses. Two of the 22 cases were deaf females with pedophilia. The mean performance IQ of the sample was 102.8 and the distribution of scores was bimodal. Case histories are presented and discussed, and legal issues, prevention, and punishment are addressed.
Sex offenses against children are considered the worst of crimes, even among criminals themselves. Attitudes have changed from blaming the victim to holding the perpetrator responsible for the actions. The prevalence of such offenses continues unabated despite the stigma for the offender and the irreparable trauma to the victim. Society and the medical and legal communities have to present a more feasible definition of the problem, addressing specifically the acts that fall under the term of pedophilia. A plan needs to be formulated by various disciplines working together for the common goal of identifying the most effective method to deal with the victims and perpetrator and also to lower the incidence and recidivism rates. Different psychological and biological tests have been devised for investigations but fall short of the desired purpose. Various treatment modalities have been suggested and tried, but much work still needs to be done in that area.
Pedophilia is a form of sexual violence against children. This crime is an extraordinary crime because it violates the honor and threatens the life of the child as the successor of the nation's ideals. Various efforts have been made by the government to provide protection for children, from increasing penalties and fines to stipulating chemical castration as a sanction for action. In jinayah fiqh itself, castration as a criminal sanction is not known in Islamic law, so it raises a lot of pros and cons in various circles of society, especially scholars regarding the emergence of castration punishment in criminal sanctions for child protection. The formulation of the problem from this research is what are the dimensions of fiqh jinayah in the Law Number 17 of 2016 concerning the castration penalty for pedophilia crimes. The purpose of this study is to determine the dimensions of fiqh jinayah in the RI Law Number 17 of 2016 concerning the castration penalty for pedophilia crimes. Furthermore, the type of research used is the type of empirical normative research, using a conceptual approach. The results obtained, that in the determination of castration for the crime of pedophilia in the Law Number 17 of 2016 there are dimensions of fiqh jinayah which are viewed from the perspective of maqashid al-syariah and maslahah al-mursalah. In the castration punishment in the perspective of maqashid al-syariah, there is a goal of passing down the shari'a that is oriented towards the maintenance of al-kulliyat al-khamsah, namely hifz ad-din, hifz an-nafs, hifz al-'aql, hifz an-nasb and hifz al-mal, In addition to maqashidal-syariah, there is also benefit as God's goal in lowering the Shari'a, namely maslahah al-mursalah, the form of the existence of maslahah in castration punishment in the form of jalb al-manafi and dar al-mafasid at the al-hajiyyat (secondary) level. With the fulfillment of the fiqh dimensions of jinayah in the castration punishment, it shows the purpose and spirit of Islam in legal legislation, because it contains the maintenance of maqashid al-khamsah and also benefits.
The experimental analysis of verbal and rule-govemed behavior is one area that potentially has much relevance to applied clinical settings, including the assessment and treatment of pedophilia. Much of the interaction between therapists and clients takes place in a verbal context. Since the publication of Skinner's Verbal Behavior in 1957, however, not much systematic clinical research conceming verbal behavior has been integrated into clinical practice, partly evidenced in the past several years by the many cognitive theories proclaiming to some extent that "mental way stations" explain the causes of behavior. This paper analyzes the fundamental aspects of rule-governed behavior, summarizes current research in this area, and explores some of the research methods and issues involved with rule-governed behavior. In addition, the potential of this area of behavioral psychology to provide important alternatives to explanations offered by cognitive psychology is also explored. Implications for the scientific use of rule govemed behavior in conducting psychological assessments with pedophiles is also examined.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Celebrity and Pedophilia -- Chapter 3: Angels, Whores, and Sweethearts: Three Faces of Lolita -- Chapter 4: Adults Acting Out: Chinatown and Abuse -- Chapter 5: Goodness, a Pedophile Father -- Chapter 6: Avoiding the White and Black Phallus -- Chapter 7: Abusive Capital in The Exorcist -- Chapter 8: Unnaturally Coupled Killers in Natural Born Killers -- Chapter 9: Myths and Madness in The Pledge -- Chapter 10: Paranoia and the Pedophile -- Chapter 11: Mummy's Boy in Spanking the Monkey -- Chapter 12: Avenging Angel: Incest and Power in The Sweet Hereafter(s) -- Chapter 13: Kiddie Fiddlers in Kids -- Chapter 14: Injustices to an Unjust God in Magnolia -- Chapter 15: The Wall Street Jekyll in American Psycho(s) -- Chapter 16: The Nature of Death and Dead Man's In/Difference -- Chapter 17: Forgetting Memory: Messianic Discourse and Science Fiction -- Chapter 18: Through Ground Zero: Post-9/11 Theology and Public Rhetoric -- Chapter 19: Killing for Fame -- Chapter 20: Conclusions -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
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Children are frequently victims of misconduct regarding the current widespread sexual abuse perpetrated by elders who are usually known by them, it is called pedophiles. Criminology reviews, therefore, are very crucial to analyze the crime. Pedophilia is a psychiatric disorder in which an adult experiences a primary or exclusive sexual attraction to pre-pubescent children, the cut-off point for pre-pubertal to age 13. The disorder results in sexual abuse, including Nepiophilia or Infantophilia that is sexual attraction to infants under 3 years old. Pedophiles, then, are adults of deviant sexual behavior abusing children. This study is aimed to examine and analyze criminology reviews for prevention of pedophile crime. It is normative juridical approach (statute approach), the conceptual and the comparative one. The factors of committing pedophilia are internal of the personal perpetrator, and external in which the community vastly influences on committing the crime and to shape how someone becomes a bad person or good one. Thus, to overcome the crime is to carry out pre-emptive, preventive, repressive and rehabilitative methods. In addition, one of child protection policies to anticipate child sexual abuse increase including pedophiles, the Government issued a regulation (Perpu) No. 1 of 2016 on the second amendment of Act No. 23 of 2002 of the children protection. The Government Regulation (Perpu) No. 1 then is legislated as Act 17 of 2016. Based on comparative studies of other countries, there is a voluntarily castration in which the perpetrators must be ready to be emasculated, aimed to reduce or suppress their libido. Yet, Indonesia values emphasizing Pancasila (Five Principles) must be referred: just and civilized humanity (humanism).
This Article identifies the present posture of child abuse and admits that the incidence of child sexual abuse among members of the clergy is documental. Indeed, incidents of child abuse seem to be more common each day throughout all segments of the population. This has affected public trust and the public has responded by revoking such traditional clerical prerogatives as the priest-penitent privilege, developing a theory of abuse in gestation, and demanding better treatment for offenders through therapy. The precise scope of this Article is to offer recommendations concerning the legal, medical and social predicament of pedophilia regarding issues that affect clergy. Rather than avoid the issue, the Article further admits that society is justified in seeking redress through the criminal process and that victims are entitled to fair compensation in the civil courts. Clerics are not immune from this redress. Nonetheless, the focus of the Article is upon recommendations that will address the needs of all involved. Because children are involved, emotions can predominate, but when asking legislators and society to address the predicament, reason must predominate. Thus, Part I will address the issue of abuse; Part II the medical evidence available to address the problem; Part III the criminal and civil law violations; and finally, Part IV will offer recommendations.