Bibliography on Female Offenders Jan. 2010

Bibliography on Female Offenders Jan. 2010

Nathan LaChine

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Bibliography on Female Offenders Jan. 2010

Abramson, P. R., & Pinkerton, S. D. (2001). A house divided: Suspicions of motherdaughter incest. New York: Norton.

Adams, Eve M. (1988). Sex of the Victim, Offender, and Helper: The Effects of Gender Differences on Attributions and Attitudes in Cases of Incest. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. Columbus, OH: The Ohio State University.

Adams, Kenneth (1991). Silently Seduced: When Parents Make their Children Partners Understanding Covert Incest. Deerfield Beach, FL: Health Communications, Inc.

Adshead, Gwen, Howett, Mimi, & Mason, Fiona (1994). Women who sexually abuse children: The undiscovered country. Journalof Sexual Aggression, 1(1), 45-56.

Allen, C. M. (1990). Women as perpetrators of child sexual abuse: Recognition barriers. In Horton, A. L., Johnson, A. L., Roundy, B. L., & Williams, L. M. (Eds.), The Incest Perpetrator: A Family Member No One Wants To Treat, pp. 108-125. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Allen, C. M. (1991). Women and Men Who Sexually Abuse Children: A Comparative Analysis. Orwell, VT: Safer Society Press.

Allen, C. M., & Pothast, H. L. (1994). Distinguishing characteristics of male and female child sex abusers. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 21, 73-88.

Anderson, Irina, & Swainson, Victoria (1991). Perceived motivation for rape: Gender differences in beliefs about female and male rape. Current Research in Social Psychology, 6(8), 107-122. Available at http://www.uiowa.edu/~grpproc/crisp/crisp.6.8.htm

Anderson, Peter B. (1993). Sexual victimization: It happens to boys, too. Louisiana Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance Journal, 57(1), 5, 12.

Anderson, Peter B. (1998). Variations in college women's self-reported heterosexual aggression. Sex Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment 10(4), 283-92.

Anderson, Peter B. (1998). Womens motives for sexual initiation and aggression. In P. B. Anderson & C. Struckman-Johnson (eds.), Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies, pp. 79-93. New York: The Guilford Press.

Anderson Peter B., & Aymami R. (1993). Reports of female initiation of sexual contact: Male and female differences. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 22(4), 335-343.

Anderson, Peter B., & Melson, Dyan T., 2002. From deviance to normalcy: Women as sexual aggressors. Electronic Journal of Human Sexuality, 5 (October 23). Available at http://www.ejhs.org/volume5/devianceabst.html

Anderson, Peter B., & Newton, Maria (1997). The initiating heterosexual contact scale: A factor analysis. Sex Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment 9, 179-186.

Anderson, Peter B., & Newton, Maria (2004). Predicting the use of sexual initiation tactics in a sample of college women. Electronic Journal of Human Sexuality, 7(May 1). Available at http://www.ejhs.org/volume7/Anderson/text.html

Anderson, P. B., & Sorenson, W. (1999). Male and female differences in reports of womens heterosexual initiation and aggression. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 28(3), 285-295.

Anderson, Peter B., & Struckman-Johnson, Cindy (eds.) (1998). Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies. New York: The Guilford Press.

Araji, S. (1997). Sexually Aggressive Children: Coming to Understand Them. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Atkinson, J. (1995). The Assessment of Female Sex Offenders. Kingston, ON: Correctional Service of Canada.

Atkinson, Jill L. (1996). Female sex offenders: A literature review. Forum on Corrections Research, 8(2), 39-42.

Bachmann, K. M., Moggi, F., & Stirnemann-Lewis, F. (1994). Mother-son incest and its long-term consequences: A neglected phenomenon in psychiatric practice. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 182, 723-725.

Banning, A. (1989). Mother-son incest: Confronting a prejudice. Child Abuse & Neglect, 13, 563-570.

Barnett. S., Corder, F., & Jehu, D. (1990). Group treatment for women sex offenders against children. Groupwork, 3(2), 191-203.

Baron, R. S., Burgess, M. L., & Kao, C. F. (1991). Detecting and labeling prejudice: Do female perpetrators go undetected? Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 17, 115-123.

Bear, E. (1993). Inpatient Treatment for Adult Survivors of Sexual Abuse: A Summary of Data From 22 Programs. Brandon, VT: Safer Society Press.

Beck, A., Harrison, P., and Guerion, P., (2009), Sexual Victimization in Juvenile Facilities Reported by Youth, 2008-09. Retrived December, 2010, American Bureau of Justice Statistics Clearinghouse, http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2113

Becker, Judith V. (1998). What we know about the characteristics and treatment of adolescents who have committed sexual offenses. Child Maltreatment, 3(4), 317-29.

Becker, Judith V., Hall, Susan, and Stinson, Jill D. (2002). Female sexual offenders: Clinical, legal, and policy issues. Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice, 1(3), 31-53.

Beier, K. M. (2000). Female analogies to perversion. Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 26(1), 79-93.

Bell, K. (1999). Female offenders of sexual assault. Journal of Emergency Nursing, 25(3), 241-243.

Behrendt, N., Buhl, N., & Seidl, S. (2002). The lethal paraphiliac syndrome: accidental autoerotic deaths in four women and a review of the literature. International Journal of Legal Medicine, 116(3), 148-52.

Blues, Anne, Moffatt, Carole, & Telford, Paula (1999). Work with adolescent females who sexually abuse: Similarities and differences. In Marcus Erooga & Helen C. Masson (eds.), Children and Young People Who Sexually Abuse Others: Challenges and Responses, pp. 168-182. London: Routledge.

Bolton, F. G., Morris, L. A., & MacEachron, A. E. (1989). Males at Risk: The Other Side of Sexual Abuse. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

Bordon, T. A., & LaTerz, J. D. (1993). Mother/daughter incest and ritual abuse: The ultimate taboos. Treating Abuse Today, 3(4), 5-8.

Boroughs, D. S. (2004). Female sexual abusers of children. Journal of Children and Youth Services Review, 26(5), 481,487.

Briere J. & Elliott D.M. (2003). Prevalence and psychological sequelae of self-reported childhood physical and sexual abuse in a general population sample of men and women. Child Abuse & Neglect, 27, 1205-1222.

Brinton, Connie, 2000. A Comparison of Sexual Arousal Patterns of Female Sex Offenders and Nonoffenders. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. San Francisco, CA: Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Sexuality.

Brodie, Faith (1992). When the Other Woman Is His Mother: Book One/Boys As Incest Victims and Male Multiple Personality Disorder/for Partners and Professionals. Tacoma, WA: Winged Eagle Press.

Brow, M.E., Knopp, F.H., & Lackey, L.B. (1987). Female Sexual Abusers: A Summary of Data from 44 Treatment Providers. Orwell: Safer Society Press.

Brown, M.E., Hull, L.A., & Panesis, S.K. (1984). Women Who Rape. Boston: Massachusetts Trial Court. [Cited in Mathews, Matthews, & Speltz, 1990; and Syed & Williams, 1996] Available from the National Institute of Corrections library. Accession number 004911. Contact NIC through the web site at http://www.nicic.org/Contact.aspx or call the NIC Information Center at 1-800-877-1461.

Bumby, N. H., & Bumby, K. M. (2004). Bridging the gender gap: Addressing juvenile females who commit sexual offences. In G. OReilly, W. L. Marshall, A. Carr, & R. C. Beckett (Eds.), The handbook of clinical intervention with young people who sexually abuse (pp. 369381). New York, NY: Brunner-Routledge.

Bumby, K., & Halstenson Bumby, N. (1997). Adolescent female sex offenders. In B. Schwartz, & H.Cellini, (eds.), The Sex Offender: New Insights, Treatment Innovations and Legal Developments, Vol. II, pp. 10-1 10-16. Kingston, NJ: Civic Research Institute, Inc.

Bumby, K. M., Halstenson Bumby, N., Burghess, A. W., & Hartman, C. R. (1996). From Victims to Victimizers: Sexually Aggressive Post-Traumatic Responses of Sexually Abused Adolescent Females.

Bunting, L. (2007). Dealing with a problem that doesn't exist? Professional responses to female perpetrate. Child Abuse Review, 4, 252-267, John Wiley & Sons

Bunting, L. (2005). Females who sexually offend against children: Responses of the child protection and criminal justice systems. NSPCC Policy Practice Research Series. London: NSPCC.

Burgess A., Hartman C., McCausland M., & Powers P. (1984). Response patterns in children and adolescents exploited through sex rings and pornography. American Journal of Psychiatry, 14, 656-662

Burket, Lowell E. (1985). Guilt and Moral Judgment in the Juvenile Female Sex Offender: A Comprehensive Literature Review. Unpublished MA thesis. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh.

Busby, D. M., & Compton, S. V. (1997). Patterns of sexual coercion in adult heterosexual relationships: An exploration of male victimization. Family Process, 36(1), 81-94.

Byard, R. W., Hucker, S. J., & Hazelwood, R. R. (1993). Fatal and near-fatal autoerotic asphyxial episodes in women: Characteristic features based on a review of nine cases. American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 14(1), 70-3

Byers, E. Sandra (1996). How well does the traditional sexual script explain sexual coercion? Review of a program of research. Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 8(1-2), 7-25.

Byers, E. Sandra (1998). Similar but different: Mens and womens experiences of sexual coercion. In P. B. Anderson & C. Struckman-Johnson (eds.), Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies, pp. 144-168. New York:The Guilford Press.

Chasnoff, I. J., Burns. W. J., Schnoll, S. H., Burns, K., Chisum, G., & Kyle-Spore, L. (1986). Maternal-neonatal incest. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 56(4), 577-580.

Chideckel, M. (1935). Female Sex Perversion. Oxford: Eugenics Publishing Co.

Christopher, F. S., Owens, L. A., & Stecker, H. L. (1993). An examination of single mens and womens sexual aggressiveness in dating relationships. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 10, 511-527.

Chow, Eva W.C., & Choy, Alberto L., 2002. Clinical characteristics and treatment response to SSRI in a female pedophile. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 31(2), 211-215.

Cochran, D., & Druker, L. (1984). Women Who Rape. Boston, MA: Report of the Office of the Commissioner of Probation.

Clements-Schreiber, M., Rempel, J., & Desmarais, S. (1998). Women's sexual pressure tactics and adherence to related attitudes: A step toward prediction. Journal of Sex Research, 35(2), 197-205.

Condy, S. R., Templer, D. I., Brown, R., & Veaco, L. (1987). Parameters of sexual contact of boys with women. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 16(5), 379-394.

Cooper, A. J., Swaminath, S., Baxter, D., & Poulin, C. (1990). A female sex offender with multiple paraphilias: A psychologic, physiologic (laboratory sexual arousal) and endocrine case study. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 35(4), 334-337.

Corrections Service of Canada. (2002). Female sex offenders: A review of the literature. Ottawa, Canada: Author.

Craig Shea, M. (1998). When the tables are turned: Verbal sexual coercion among college women. In Peter B. Anderson, & Cindy J. Struckman-Johnson (eds.), Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies. New York, NY: The Guilford Press.

Cranford, Susan, & Williams, Rose (1998). Critical issues in managing female offenders. Corrections Today, 60(7), 130-135.

Crawford, Colin (1997). Forbidden Femininity: Child Sexual Abuse and Female Sexuality. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing Co.

Crockett, L. C. (2001). The deepest wound: How a journey to El Salvador led to healing from motherdaughter incest. Lincoln, NE: Writers Showcase.

Davin, Patricia A. (1999). Secrets revealed: A study of female sex offenders. In Patricia A. Davin, Julia C. R. Hislop, & Teresa Dunbar, Female Sexual Abusers: Three Views, pp. 9-134. Brandon, VT: Safer Society Press.

Davin, Patricia A., Dunbar, Teresa, & Hislop, Julia (1999). Female Sexual Abusers: Three Views. Brandon, VT, Safer Society Press.

Deering, R. and Mellor, D. (2007) Female-Perpetrated Child Sex Abuse: Definitional and Categorisational Analysis, Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, Vol 14, No 2, pp. 218-226, Australian Academic Press Pty. Ltd., Australia

Deering, Rebecca and Mellor, David. (2009) Sentencing of male and female child sex offenders : Australian study, Psychiatry, psychology and law, pp. 394-412, Australian Academic Press Pty. Ltd., Melbourne, Vic.

Denov, Myriam S. (2001). A culture of denial: Exploring professional perspectives on female sex offending. Canadian Journal of Criminology, 43(3), 303-329.

Denov, Myriam S. (2003). The myth of innocence: Sexual scripts and the recognition of child sexual abuse by female perpetrators. Journal of Sex Research, 40(3), 303-314.

Denov, Mryiam S. (2003). To a Safer Place? Victims of sexual abuse by females and their disclosures to professionals. Child Abuse & Neglect, 27(1), 46-61.

Denov, Myriam S. (2004). Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: A Culture of Denial. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate Publishing Company.

Denov, M., & Cortoni, F. (2006). Women who sexually abuse children. In C. Hilarski & J.S. Wodarski (Eds.), Comprehensive mental health practice with sex offenders and their families (pp. 71-99). Binghamton, NY: The Haworth Press.

Dowden, C., & Andrews, D. (1999). What works for female offenders: A meta-analytic review. Crime and Delinquency, 45, 438-452.

Dube, S. R., et al. (2005). Long-term consequences of childhood sexual abuse by gender of victim. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 28, 430-438.

Dunbar, Teresa (1993). Women Who Sexually Molest Female Children. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. Los Angeles: University of Southern California.

Dunbar, Teresa (1999). Women who sexually molest female children. In Patricia A. Davin, Julia C. R. Hislop, & Teresa Dunbar, Female Sexual Abusers: Three Views, pp. 311-377. Brandon, VT: Safer Society Press.

Duncan, Lauren E., & Williams Linda M., 1998. Gender role socialization and male-on-male vs. female-on-male child sexual abuse. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 39(9/10), 765-785.

Eldridge, Hilary (1994). Barbaras story: A mother who sexually abused. In Michele Elliott, (ed.), Female Sexual Abuse of Children, pp. 74-87. New York: The Guilford Press.

Eldridge, Hilary, & Saradjian, Jacqui (2000). Replacing the function of abusive behaviors for the offender: Remaking relapse prevention in working with women who sexually abuse children. In D.R. Laws, S.M. Hudson & T. Ward (Eds.), Remaking Relapse Prevention with Sex Offenders: A Sourcebook, pp. 402-426. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications.

Eldridge, H., Elliott, I. A., & Ashfield, S. (2009). Assessment of women who sexually abuse children. In M.C. Calder (Ed.), Sexual abuse assessments: Using and developing frameworks for practice (pp. 213-227). London: Russell House Publishing.

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Elliot, D., & Briere, J. (1994). Forensic sexual abuse evaluations of older children Disclosures and symptomology. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 12(3), 261-277.

Elliott, A. J. & Peterson, L. W. (1993). Maternal sexual abuse of male children: When to suspect and how to uncover it. Postgraduate Medicine, 94(1), 169-180.

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Elliott, Michele (1994). What survivors tell us An overview. In Michelle Elliott (ed.), Female Sexual Abuse of Children, pp. 5-13. New York: The Guilford Press

Ellis, Lee (1998). Why some sexual assaults are not committed by men: A biosocial analysis. In P. B. Anderson & C. Struckman- Johnson (eds.), Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies, pp. 105-118. New York: The Guilford Press.

Erooga, Marcus, & Masson, Helen C. (eds.) (1999). Children and Young People Who Sexually Abuse Others: Challenges and Responses. London: Routledge.

Etherington, Kim (1999). Maternal sexual abuse of males. Child Abuse Review, 6(2), 107-117.

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Faller, K.C. (1989). Characteristics of a clinical sample of sexually abused children: How boys and girl victims differ. Child Abuse and Neglect, 13, 281-291.

Faller, K. C. (1991). Polyincestuous families: An exploratory study." Journal of Interpersonal Violence 6(3), 310-322.

Fedoroff, J. Paul, & Fishell, Alicja (1999). Paraphilic and other unconventional sexual disorders in girls and women. In E. M. Palace (ed.), Womens Health: A Behavioral Medicine Approach. Oxford: Oxford Press.

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Fehrenbach, P. A. & Monastersky, C. (1988). Characteristics of female adolescent sexual offenders. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 58(1), 148-151.

Fiebert, M. S., & Tucci, M. (1998). Sexual coercion: Men victimized by women. Journal of Men's Studies, 6(2), 127-133.

Finch, S.M. (1973). Sexual abuse by mothers. Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality, 7(1), 191.

Finkelhor, D., & Russell, D. (1984). Women as perpetrators: Review of the evidence. In D. Finkelhor (ed.), Child Sexual Abuse: New Theory and Research, pp. 171-187. New York: Free Press.

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FitzRoy, L. (1997). Mother/daughter rape: A challenge for feminism. In S. Cook & J. Bessant (Eds.), Womens encounters with violence: Australian experiences (pp. 40-54). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

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Forbes, J. (1992). Female sexual abusers: The contemporary search for equivalence. Practice, 6, 102-111.

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Thanks to BloggerT for pulling this together. I'm not sure if some of the work was also done by a couple of other MS members (folks had volunteered to put it together but I'm not sure who and what they did. If you were one who did work on this, please pm me so I can give you credit as well.)
 
Maybe an explanation for how to red it for less astute folks like me. It looks like it is listiong books nut I can't ge sure. Sorry the effects of a life without much formal education
 
great list!

i would add Toxic Parents by Susan Forward
 
How to read a bibliography....

Books are listed with title, publisher and date, like this:
Adams, Kenneth (1991). Silently Seduced: When Parents Make their Children Partners Understanding Covert Incest. Deerfield Beach, FL: Health Communications, Inc.


Journal articles have an article title, journal name, volume, page numbers, and date, like this:
Weldon, E. V. (1990). Women who sexually abuse children. British Medical Journal, 300(6738), 1527-1528.

Sometimes, journal articles or abstracts (summaries of the article) are available on line, but most of the time, you have to subscribe to the journal. If you go to a college or university library, you can usually get to the articles for free through the library.

It's possible that some of the books may be carried by bigger bookstores like Amazon or Barnes & Nobel but these titles are pretty specialized and may be tough to find.

Hope that helps explain the differences.
 
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I see my T listed in this biblio.

Allen

pufferfish :whistle:

The name spelling is slightly different so maybe not
 
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Ken Singer said:
Thanks to BloggerT for pulling this together. I'm not sure if some of the work was also done by a couple of other MS members (folks had volunteered to put it together but I'm not sure who and what they did. If you were one who did work on this, please pm me so I can give you credit as well.)

Thank you Ken. While I did not talk with anyone here on MS to put it together I did receive a lot of help from a lot of different places. Many people and places sent me lists of what they had and I put them all together. I hope to maintain the list and keep it up to date as time goes on and hopefully people will send me more to be added to the list.
 
Ken,

The current updated biblio is now over 400+ studies with most of them linked so you can go right to them. A good number have the entire study available; there are studies from around the world and ranging from 1865 as the oldest all the way up to now. It is updated as new/more studies are found and kept current on a monthly basis. Also we will e-mail a copy of it (in a Word doc) to anyone who wants one.

It can be found here http://www.female-offenders.com/bibliography.html
 
I wrote my master's thesis (in English) on the discursive erasure of the male victim of childhood sexual abuse. I wonder if there is interest?
 
Could you say a bit more about this? If it's not regarding female abusers, it might be better to place it in another forum.
 
Hi Ken,

My thesis specifically addresses the socially-produced norms that deny the coherence of the subject position "male victim of female sexual abuse" in western culture. My research was not clinical, but theoretical, working from ideas developed in feminist theory, gender theory, and queer theory.

I would be happy to forward a copy.

Yours,
James
 
Hey Cement,

I'd be interested in seeing this also, if you don't mind sharing.

-efm
 
yup. Interested in participating/knowing more about the lack of literature on male survivors of female perpetration.
 
The best book I've ever read on abusive women and mothers, and an incredible book in general, is "Understanding the Borderline Mother" by Christine Ann Lawson. You have two of her articles listed above. It's incredibly informative about the dynamics of families with abusive mothers and written in a very moving, accessible style.
 
When He's Married to Mom: How to Help Mother-Enmeshed Men Open Their Hearts to True Love and Commitment by Kenneth Adams and Alexander P. Morgan

The Emotional Incest Syndrome: What to do When a Parent's Love Rules Your Life [Paperback]
Dr. Patricia Love

The Betrayal Bond: Breaking Free of Exploitative Relationships

Mother-Son Incest: The Unthinkable Broken Taboo, An Overview of Findings by Hani Miletski

Bradshaw On: The Family: A New Way of Creating Solid Self-Esteem

Men Surviving Incest: A Male Survivor Shares the Process of Recovery by T. Thomas

Betrayal of Innocence: Incest and Its Devastation
Susan Forward
 
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If I can add one, "Come Here" by Richard Berendzen with Laura Palmer is one of the first books I read about CSA and was very helpful to me in understanding the power and control of an abusive mother. Here is an article that talks about the book and Berendzen's abuse in some detail.

http://articles.latimes.com/1993-10-24/books/bk-49007_1_sexual-abuse
 
Its obvious who the enemy is I mean serously check this out these feminists blame us for their actions.http://www.deviantart.com/users/outgoing?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmRCqRDfH78
These feminists have a talk show and in this episode, they decide to talk about male victims of domestic violence. To start off, they stress that women are the overwhelming victims of violence, and what male victims there are are only victims by technicality and don't really deserve to be counted. Then they bring on a feminist doctor who goes into further detail that denying a woman money counts as domestic violence. She also explains how when you study the statistics the proper/feminist way, you can see that women are the overwhelming majority of victims. The feminist head of a shelter for only women and children begrudgingly admits that it is harder for men to receive help than women and she sounds a bit disappointed when she adds that some of her shelters actually do a little to help men. When confronted with an American study finding that men and women engage in violent and controlling behaviors at comparable rates, the feminists naturally disregard them on the grounds that they have faulty methodology. The study found that women are violent and it asked the same questions regardless of sex, so clearly it must be faulty.

But probably the most abhorrent thing said was that a significant proportion of males classified as victims are actually perpetrators. She stresses that those who help male victims have to be trained to screen these men to make sure they aren't actually perpetrators. Naturally, no such precautions are necessary for women who claim to be victims. These are the sentiments expressed by the director of domestic violence shelters across Britain. The doctor agreed that it was necessary to scrutinize male victims more than female
 
Hey all, just came across a recent article that compiled data on female perpetrators and thought I'd share. Among the statistics are that women account for about 20% of reported sexual offenses, and 70% of them are mothers perpetrating on their own children. Lots of other stunning information.

Citation added 4/10/2020, the older link didn't include this table without payment. Link to table.
Mod. Ceremony.

David Axlyn McLeod (2015) Female Offenders in Child Sexual
Abuse Cases: A National Picture, Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 24:1, 97-114, DOI:
10.1080/10538712.2015.978925

 
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Almost all of these citations are more than 10 years old. I wish I (or anyone) had the time to update this list - it really makes the point that women can be and are perpetrators.
 
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