We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The Role of Technology in Managing People Who Have Been Convicted of Internet Child Abuse Image Offences.
- Authors
Lilley, Claire M.
- Abstract
The last 20 years have seen an explosion in the availability, ownership and use of devices used to access the internet. There has been a simultaneous increase in the number of people viewing child abuse images. The ease of access to this material online has removed a key inhibitor for offenders. Technology has facilitated the distribution of child abuse images, but is also used to prevent and identify offending, as well as to manage offenders. There is a range of technological tools currently used in England and Wales to manage those offenders who have been convicted of accessing child abuse images and who are living in the community. Some are specific to the computer as the situation of the crime. This article analyses the evidence base for each. The article concludes that each tool has features which might contribute to the management of internet child sex offenders, but that none have yet been proven or disproven to be effective. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Key Practitioner Messages Technology to help manage the risk posed by internet child sex offenders is developing and may offer promise., None of these technological tools have been proven or disproven to be effective management tools for internet child sex offenders., Offender managers in the police and probation services should be mindful of this and not be overly reliant on them., Robust evaluations of these types of technology for these offenders are needed.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; WALES; ENGLAND; CHILD sexual abuse laws; CHILD sexual abuse; LEGAL status of sex offenders; COMPUTER software; CRIME; DIGITAL diagnostic imaging; FORENSIC psychiatry; HUMAN rights; INFORMATION technology; INTERNET; POLICE; RISK assessment; RISK management in business; EVIDENCE-based medicine; PROFESSIONAL practice; GOVERNMENT policy; ACCESS to information
- Publication
Child Abuse Review, 2016, Vol 25, Issue 5, p386
- ISSN
0952-9136
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/car.2444