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The treatment of sex offenders : evidence, ethics, and human rights

Version 2 2024-06-03, 14:25
Version 1 2011-09-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 14:25 authored by A Birgden, H Cucolo
Public policy is necessarily a political process with the law and order issue high on the political agenda. Consequently, working with sex offenders is fraught with legal and ethical minefields, including the mandate that community protection automatically outweighs offender rights. In addressing community protection, contemporary sex offender treatment is based on management rather than rehabilitation. We argue that treatment-as-management violates offender rights because it is ineffective and unethical. The suggested alternative is to deliver treatment-as-rehabilitation underpinned by international human rights law and universal professional ethics. An effective and ethical community–offender balance is more likely when sex offenders are treated with respect and dignity that, as human beings, they have a right to claim.

History

Related Materials

Location

Thousand Oaks, California

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2011, Sage Publications

Journal

Sexual abuse : a journal of research and treatment

Volume

23

Pagination

295-313

ISSN

1079-0632

Issue

3

Publisher

Sage