{"title":"A Cite-Checker's Guide to Sexual Dangerousness","authors":"F. Zimring, Chrysanthi S. Leon","doi":"10.15779/Z38MK9D","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In June of 2006, the UC Davis Law Review published an article by Professor Ruby Andrew arguing for rejecting any differentiation between persons convicted of intra-familial child sex abuse and those convicted of child sex abuse where the victim is a stranger or non-related acquaintance. Professor Andrew set out to persuade her readers that fathers and stepfathers who sexually abuse relatives present the same level of both moral culpability and danger to the community as non-familial child abusers, and that their related victims are best protected through rigidly punitive control policies. We agree with Andrew that familial victims are no less deserving than the victims of strangers. But it does not follow that the best way to help children victimized by relatives is by mandating imprisonment, or requiring the public humiliation of the family created by community notification. While we disagree with the general conclusion of Andrew's article, the reason for this note is a more specific concern about questions of fact in legal scholarship. On a question at the heart of the penal response to sex offenders - the relative dangers of sex recidivism for incest and non-incest child abusers - Andrew's article leaves a demonstrably false impression about current empirical research and, wittingly or unwittingly, ignores scores of published researched studies involving many thousands of subjects in several countries. What law review readers do not know can hurt them. We would hope that a peer-review process in which experts were consulted would have caught Andrew's false claims. But short of that, law students or lay people who checked her citations using the universally-accessible search engine provided by Google could have easily caught this problem.","PeriodicalId":386851,"journal":{"name":"Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-11-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15779/Z38MK9D","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
In June of 2006, the UC Davis Law Review published an article by Professor Ruby Andrew arguing for rejecting any differentiation between persons convicted of intra-familial child sex abuse and those convicted of child sex abuse where the victim is a stranger or non-related acquaintance. Professor Andrew set out to persuade her readers that fathers and stepfathers who sexually abuse relatives present the same level of both moral culpability and danger to the community as non-familial child abusers, and that their related victims are best protected through rigidly punitive control policies. We agree with Andrew that familial victims are no less deserving than the victims of strangers. But it does not follow that the best way to help children victimized by relatives is by mandating imprisonment, or requiring the public humiliation of the family created by community notification. While we disagree with the general conclusion of Andrew's article, the reason for this note is a more specific concern about questions of fact in legal scholarship. On a question at the heart of the penal response to sex offenders - the relative dangers of sex recidivism for incest and non-incest child abusers - Andrew's article leaves a demonstrably false impression about current empirical research and, wittingly or unwittingly, ignores scores of published researched studies involving many thousands of subjects in several countries. What law review readers do not know can hurt them. We would hope that a peer-review process in which experts were consulted would have caught Andrew's false claims. But short of that, law students or lay people who checked her citations using the universally-accessible search engine provided by Google could have easily caught this problem.
2006年6月,《加州大学戴维斯分校法律评论》(UC Davis Law Review)发表了鲁比·安德鲁(Ruby Andrew)教授的一篇文章,主张拒绝对家庭内儿童性侵的定罪者和那些受害者是陌生人或无亲属关系的熟人的定罪者进行区分。安德鲁教授开始说服她的读者,父亲和继父对亲属进行性侵犯,与非家庭虐待儿童的人一样,在道德上有罪,对社会构成危险,他们的亲属受害者最好通过严格的惩罚性控制政策得到保护。我们同意安德鲁的观点,家人的受害者和陌生人的受害者一样值得得到帮助。但这并不意味着帮助受亲属伤害的儿童的最佳方式是强制监禁,或者要求通过社区通知来公开羞辱家庭。虽然我们不同意安德鲁文章的总体结论,但写这篇文章的原因是对法律学术中的事实问题有更具体的关注。关于对性犯罪者的刑事反应的核心问题——乱伦和非乱伦虐待儿童的性累犯的相对危险性——安德鲁的文章对当前的实证研究留下了明显错误的印象,并且有意无意地忽略了在几个国家发表的涉及数千个主题的大量研究。法律评论的读者不知道的事情可能会伤害他们。我们希望在咨询专家的同行评议过程中发现安德鲁的虚假声明。但除此之外,法律系学生或使用谷歌提供的通用搜索引擎查看她的引文的外行人很容易发现这个问题。