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Ethical Treatment for
All Youth
www.ethicaltreatment.org
Email: etay@ethicaltreatment.org
About the author
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JUVENILE SEX OFFENDERS: A CASE AGAINST THE LEGAL AND
CLINICAL STATUS QUO
By Elizabeth J. Letourneau & Michael H. Miner
Published in Sexual Abuse: A Journal
of Research & Treatment
July 2005, Vol. 17 Issue 3, pp. 293-312.
Abstract: The past two
decades have seen a movement toward harsher legal sanctions and
lengthy, restrictive treatment programs for sex offenders. This has not
only been the case for adults, but also for juveniles who commit sex
offenses. The increased length and severity of legal and clinical
interventions for juvenile sex offenders appear to have resulted from
three false assumptions: (1) there is an epidemic of juvenile
offending, including juvenile sex offending; (2) juvenile sex offenders
have more in common with adult sex offenders than with other juvenile
delinquents; and (3) in the absence of sex offender-specific treatment,
juvenile sex offenders are at exceptionally high risk of reoffending.
The available data do not support any of the above assumptions;
however, these assumptions continue to influence the treatment and
legal interventions applied to juvenile sex offenders and contributed
to the application of adult interventions to juvenile sex offending. In
so doing, these legal and clinical interventions fail to consider the
unique developmental factors that characterize adolescence, and thus
may be ineffective or worse. Fortunately, a paradigm shift that
acknowledges these developmental factors appears to be emerging in
clinical areas of intervention, although this trend does not appear as
prevalent in legal sanctions.
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