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Over the past several decades the seeming escalation of crimes
involving sexually deviant, coercive, and aggressive behavior has
become an increasingly serious problem, manifested in costs to both
victims and society at large. The long-term psychological impact of
sexual assault on adult and child victims has been documented
numerous times. The costs incurred by society include a network of
medical and psychological services provided to aid victim recovery,
the investigation, trial, and incarceration of offenders-often in
segregated units or special facilities-and the invisible but
tangible blanket of fear that forces potential victims to schedule
normal daily activities around issues of safety. Despite the
gravity of the problem, there has been a paucity of empirical
research directed at the etiology, course, remediation, and
management of sexually deviant and coercive behavior. In treating
these disorders and in making crucial decisions about how to manage
these offenders, clinicians have been forced to rely on their
personal experience. Such experience by its nature is unsystematic
and lacks the validation that empirical research provides. The lack
of sound empirical data addressing the problem is certainly
noteworthy, though not surprising. The paucity of research in this
area may well be attributable to historical scientific timidity
about most aspects of sexual behavior. In 1922 Dr. Robert L.
Over the past several decades the seeming escalation of crimes
involving sexually deviant, coercive, and aggressive behavior has
become an increasingly serious problem, manifested in costs to both
victims and society at large. The long-term psychological impact of
sexual assault on adult and child victims has been documented
numerous times. The costs incurred by society include a network of
medical and psychological services provided to aid victim recovery,
the investigation, trial, and incarceration of offenders-often in
segregated units or special facilities-and the invisible but
tangible blanket of fear that forces potential victims to schedule
normal daily activities around issues of safety. Despite the
gravity of the problem, there has been a paucity of empirical
research directed at the etiology, course, remediation, and
management of sexually deviant and coercive behavior. In treating
these disorders and in making crucial decisions about how to manage
these offenders, clinicians have been forced to rely on their
personal experience. Such experience by its nature is unsystematic
and lacks the validation that empirical research provides. The lack
of sound empirical data addressing the problem is certainly
noteworthy, though not surprising. The paucity of research in this
area may well be attributable to historical scientific timidity
about most aspects of sexual behavior. In 1922 Dr. Robert L.
It is the mission of this volume to accomplish functioning
normally. Similarly, if our MMPI two goals: (1) present a
relatively broad profile falls entirely within the designated
spectrum or research focusing on biophysical 'normal range' we
conclude that our person aspects of personality, (2) select those
studies ality is functioning normally. Abnormal per examining
normal personality. Both state sonality is thought of as so extreme
ments require brief clarification. (schizophrenia,
manic-depression, neurosis With regards to the first point, it will
and the like) that it bears no resemblance, become evident why the
qualifier 'relatively' is surely nothing to do with 'normals'. Such
used. This area of inquiry is a recent one, only reasoning is
surely one of the factors con within the past several decades
moving into tributing to the sparse research on normal the
neighbourhood of scientific respectability. personality (i.e. what
is normal need not be As such, investigation has been limited to a
investigated since, by definition, it is normal.)."
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