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Moving beyond discourses of agency, gain and blame: reconceptualising young people’s experiences of sexual exploitation

Research Output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding Chapter Peer-review

Abstract

This chapter explores the relationship between victimhood and agency, and the unhelpful binary ways in which it has often been conceptualised within child sexual exploitation (CSE) discourse and practice to date. It observes how adherence to dichotomous conceptualisations of those experiencing CSE, and associated narrow understandings of CSE victimhood, have served to diminish our responses to particular populations and particular manifestations of harm; namely those typified by any degree of observable agency on the part of the child. Here, reframing young people's experiences of CSE through the lens of structuration theory offers a much-needed way to move us beyond the observable simplistic binary conceptualisations of victimhood versus agency. It helps us to better understand and respond to the widely variable and complex dynamics and contexts of CSE. Specifically, reconceptualising young people as ‘reflexive agents’ operating within a ‘structure of constraint’ offers us a means of concurrently recognising the range of biographical and contextual factors at play in any given situation, and allows us to move beyond exclusionary ‘idealised’ victim-based patterns of identification and response.

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding Chapter Peer-review

Original language

English

Pages from-to (Number of pages)

Pages 23-42

Publication milestones

  • Published - 01/01/2019

Publication status

Published - 01/01/2019

Place of publication

Bristol

Publisher

Policy Press, United Kingdom
9781447351412

External Publication IDs

  • handle.net: 10547/624704

Host publication title

Child Sexual Exploitation: Why Theory Matters