The prevalence, nature, and impact of intrafamilial child sexual abuse: findings from a Rapid Evidence Assessment

Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice,Volume 2, Issue 4, December 2016. Purpose The purpose of this paper is to report on the findings from a study commissioned by the Office of the Children ’s Commissioner (OCC) in England, concerning intrafamilial child sexual abuse (IFCSA)/incest. Specifically, it aims to explore what is known about the prevalence, nature, and impact of IFCSA and where the gaps in knowledge lie. Design/methodology/approach A Rapid Evidence Assessment (REA) was us ed, the function of which is to: search the literature as comprehensively as possible within given time constraints; collate descriptive outlines of the available evidence on a topic and critically appraise it; sift out studies of poor quality; and provide an overview of the evidence. Over 57,000 do cuments were scanned, and 296 ultimately systematically analysed. Findings It was found that: there is wide variation in prevalence rates between studies; girls are more likely to be victims than boys; the onset of abuse is typically school age; abuse in minority groups is under-reported; sibling abuse may be more common than that by fathers; female perpetrated abuse may be under-reported; families where abuse occurs are often dysfunctional; and IFCSA has significant adverse effects on victims. Research limitations/implications A REA is not a full systematic review, differing in the scope and depth of the searches and depending almost exclusively on electronic databases, not acc...
Source: Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice - Category: Criminology Source Type: research
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