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This book considers the rapidly evolving, both legally and
socially, nature of image-based abuse, for both minors and adults.
Drawing mainly from UK data, legislation and case studies, it
presents a thesis that the law is, at best, struggling to keep up
with some fundamental issues around image based abuse, such as the
sexual nature of the crimes and the long term impact on victims,
and at worst, in the case of supporting minors, not fit for
purpose. It shows, through empirical and legislative analysis, that
the dearth of education around this topic, coupled with cultural
norms, creates a victim blaming culture that extends into
adulthood. It proposes both legislative developments and need for
wider stakeholder engagement to understand and support victims, and
the impact the non-consensual sharing of intimate images can have
on their long-term mental health and life in general. The book is
of interest to scholar of law, criminology, sociology, police and
socio-technical studies, and is also to those who practice law, law
enforcement or wider social care role in both child and adult
safeguarding.
Using the UK as a case study the book aims to provide a detailed
rationale for the tension between a policy perspective that tries
to provide protection for victims of such practices through
legislation and the need to better understand a phenomenon that
constantly evolves as a result of new technology, disruptive
adoption and social norms.
This book explores, through a children's rights-based perspective,
the emergence of a safeguarding dystopia in child online protection
that has emerged from a tension between an over-reliance in
technical solutions and a lack of understanding around code and
algorithm capabilities. The text argues that a safeguarding
dystopia results in docile children, rather than safe ones, and
that we should stop seeing technology as the sole solution to
online safeguarding. The reader will, through reading this book,
gain a deeper understanding of the current policy arena in online
safeguarding, what causes children to beocme upset online, and the
doomed nature of safeguarding solutions. The book also features a
detailed analysis of issues surrounding content filtering, access
monitoring, surveillance, image recognition, and tracking. This
book is aimed at legal practitioners, law students, and those
interested in child safeguarding and technology.
This book considers the rapidly evolving, both legally and
socially, nature of image-based abuse, for both minors and adults.
Drawing mainly from UK data, legislation and case studies, it
presents a thesis that the law is, at best, struggling to keep up
with some fundamental issues around image based abuse, such as the
sexual nature of the crimes and the long term impact on victims,
and at worst, in the case of supporting minors, not fit for
purpose. It shows, through empirical and legislative analysis, that
the dearth of education around this topic, coupled with cultural
norms, creates a victim blaming culture that extends into
adulthood. It proposes both legislative developments and need for
wider stakeholder engagement to understand and support victims, and
the impact the non-consensual sharing of intimate images can have
on their long-term mental health and life in general. The book is
of interest to scholar of law, criminology, sociology, police and
socio-technical studies, and is also to those who practice law, law
enforcement or wider social care role in both child and adult
safeguarding.
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