Policy Press
Five The Rotherham abuse scandal
Abstract
This chapter examines the Rotherham abuse scandal, which centres on the exploitation and abuse of (mostly) teenage girls between 1997 and 2013 in the South Yorkshire town of Rotherham and the publication of an official inquiry report (Jay, 2014) into the abuse and, more specifically, into agencies’ response to it. The report was released on 26 August 2014 and sparked intense media coverage. It is not difficult to see why. The report details the violent and sexual abuse and trafficking of minors, often over a number of years, carried out by groups of men who had befriended these children ‘on the streets’. This pattern of abuse is described as ‘child sexual exploitation’ (CSE). The report identifies 1,400 victims, emphasising that this is a ‘conservative estimate’. Around a third were in local council care or known to social services. The report is highly critical of the two key agencies in charge of CSE, namely the police and the council and its social and children's services. It paints a picture of serious failings and repeated inaction; Jay particularly criticises senior staff and management who actively ignored concerns about CSE.
This chapter considers the Rotherham abuse scandal from a moral panic perspective. It explores in detail media representations of the scale of the problem and the framing of blame, two key elements through which moral panics are instigated (Cohen, 2002). To this end, a limited press analysis was carried out in which the coverage of four newspapers was examined during the five days following the release of the Jay report.
Abstract
This chapter examines the Rotherham abuse scandal, which centres on the exploitation and abuse of (mostly) teenage girls between 1997 and 2013 in the South Yorkshire town of Rotherham and the publication of an official inquiry report (Jay, 2014) into the abuse and, more specifically, into agencies’ response to it. The report was released on 26 August 2014 and sparked intense media coverage. It is not difficult to see why. The report details the violent and sexual abuse and trafficking of minors, often over a number of years, carried out by groups of men who had befriended these children ‘on the streets’. This pattern of abuse is described as ‘child sexual exploitation’ (CSE). The report identifies 1,400 victims, emphasising that this is a ‘conservative estimate’. Around a third were in local council care or known to social services. The report is highly critical of the two key agencies in charge of CSE, namely the police and the council and its social and children's services. It paints a picture of serious failings and repeated inaction; Jay particularly criticises senior staff and management who actively ignored concerns about CSE.
This chapter considers the Rotherham abuse scandal from a moral panic perspective. It explores in detail media representations of the scale of the problem and the framing of blame, two key elements through which moral panics are instigated (Cohen, 2002). To this end, a limited press analysis was carried out in which the coverage of four newspapers was examined during the five days following the release of the Jay report.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Contributors vi
- Series editors’ preface viii
- Introduction 1
- Child protection and moral panic 5
- Unearthing melodrama: moral panic theory and the enduring characterisation of child trafficking 17
- Lost childhood? 29
- Internet risk research and child sexual abuse: a misdirected moral panic? 41
- The Rotherham abuse scandal 53
- Afterword 63
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- Contributors vi
- Series editors’ preface viii
- Introduction 1
- Child protection and moral panic 5
- Unearthing melodrama: moral panic theory and the enduring characterisation of child trafficking 17
- Lost childhood? 29
- Internet risk research and child sexual abuse: a misdirected moral panic? 41
- The Rotherham abuse scandal 53
- Afterword 63