I have not read the CASA report and I am not familiar with their findings, but regarding your question about the association of childhood victimization and adult offending there is evidence to consider. Cathy Widom is well known for her prospective study examining various forms of childhood victimization and later adult offenses. I don't have the citations at the moment but I'm sure you all have them or can find them. Widom found a small effect of physical abuse and neglect on later violent offending, but as for sexual abuse...there was no relation to adult sexual offending. At a conference I asked Widom about this issue, to which she responded that there appears to be no sexual cycle of violence. A couple of years ago there was a GAO report examining the sexual cycle of violence, which examined Widom's data, data from Linda Williams, and some other data, and their conclusion as well was that there is no support for the idea of a sexual cycle of violence. For clinicians, of course, it is possible to have a preponderance of clients who have experienced abuse and report abusing others. However, the clinician must remember that there are distinct selection biases at work in determining which types of people come to you (or are brought to you) for treatment. For some individuals, childhood sexual abuse may be a factor in later sexual offenses. But for the general population, this does not appear to be a risk factor. Evan R. Harrington, Ph.D.
[ Home |
About NDACAN | Datasets |
User Support |
Contribute Data |
Summer Research Institute ]
[ CMRL List Serve | Bibliography
| Measures Index |
Useful Links | Search ]
Copyright © 1996-2012 National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect