37 results on '"Wortley R"'
Search Results
2. Child and Adult Attachment Styles among Individuals Who Have Committed Filicide: The Case for Examining Attachment by Gender
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Eriksson, L., primary, Arnautovska, U., additional, McPhedran, S., additional, Mazerolle, P., additional, and Wortley, R., additional
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- 2020
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3. Production of 8.4 m primary mirror segments for GMT
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Navarro, Ramón, Geyl, Roland, Martin, H. M., Ceragioli, R., Gasho, V., Jannuzi, B. T., Kim, D. W., Kingsley, J. S., Law, K., Loeff, A., Lutz, R. D., Meyen, S., Oh, C. J., Tuell, M. T., Weinberger, S. N., West, S. C., Whitsitt, R., and Wortley, R.
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- 2022
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4. Child and Adult Attachment Styles among Individuals Who Have Committed Filicide: The Case for Examining Attachment by Gender.
- Author
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Eriksson, L., Arnautovska, U., McPhedran, S., Mazerolle, P., and Wortley, R.
- Abstract
Gender differences in self-reported attachment styles of 18 individuals who had committed filicide were examined. Insecure attachment styles (avoidant and/or anxious-ambivalent) to primary caregivers were particularly common among males. Almost all experienced insecure romantic attachment. Partial support for insecure attachment continuity (childhood to adulthood), particularly among men, was found. Comparisons with 283 men and women who had committed other homicide types revealed that filicide males were the most common (across offender gender and victim-offender relationship) to hold insecure attachment to maternal caregivers. The role and nature of attachment patterns should be extended beyond the existing research focus on maternal filicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Manufacture of 8.4 m segments for the GMT primary mirror
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Navarro, Ramón, Geyl, Roland, Martin, H. M., Ceragioli, R., Jannuzi, B., Kim, D. W., Kingsley, J. S., Law, K, Loeff, A., Lutz, R. D., McMahon, T. J., Meyen, S., Oh, C. J., Tuell, M. T., Weinberger, S. N., West, S. C., and Wortley, R.
- Published
- 2020
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6. Drug Dealing: Amsterdam's Red Light District
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Jacques, S., Bernasco, W., Leclerc, B., Wortley, R., and Spatial Economics
- Published
- 2013
7. Critiques of situational crime prevention
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WORTLEY, R., Fisher, BS, and Lab, SP
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Social Science ,MathematicsofComputing_GENERAL ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
This is a welcome addition to any academic library.
- Published
- 2010
8. Measuring police attitudes toward discretion
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Wortley, R. K.
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police discretion, police decision making, police personality, authoritarianism, ethnocentrism, JUROR BIAS, AUTHORITARIANISM, PERSONALITY, DOGMATISM, IDEOLOGY, OFFICERS, SCALE - Abstract
This article describes the construction of two scales to measure police attitudes toward the selective enforcement of the law. The Service-Legalistic scale measures police discretion along a flexible-inflexible continuum. Service-oriented police advocate the use of discretion to help solve social problems; legalistic police oppose discretion because it interferes with their duty to enforce the law equitably. The Watchman scale examines the use of discretion to maintain control. Watchman-oriented police simultaneously ignore minor offenses and call for greater powers to deal with serious crime. Service-related discretion was found to negatively correlate with authoritarianism and the belief that crime is caused by the individual dispositions of offenders; watchman-related discretion positively correlated with authoritarianism, ethnocentrism, and a belief in individual crime causation.
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- 2003
9. What’s in a name? Perceptions of course names for criminal justice professionals
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WORTLEY, R. and Wimshurst, K.
- Abstract
Courses dealing with crime and the criminal justice system go under various names, Criminology, Criminal Justice, Justice Studies, and Justice Administration being among the most popular. Presumably, those who name these courses see subtle differences between these names and select a title that is seen to best reflect the particular focus of their course. For example, in Australia Justice Administration has been generally used for courses that have an explicit vocational mission. This paper, however, is not about what these various courses contain, but what people think they contain. The paper reports on a study that examined the perceptions of various course names by prospective and current students in the field. It is argued that the name of a course has significant implications for the attractiveness of that course to prospective students and the way that students in a course define their studies. Moreover, the meanings that students attach to course names seem to impact upon their sense of occupational identity.
- Published
- 2000
10. Production of 8.4 m primary mirror segments for GMT.
- Author
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Martin, H. M., Ceragioli, R., Gasho, V., Jannuzi, B. T., Kim, D. W., Kingsley, J. S., Law, K., Loeff, A., Lutz, R. D., Meyen, S., Oh, C. J., Tuell, M. T., Weinberger, S. N., West, S. C., Whitsitt, R., and Wortley, R.
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- 2022
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11. A two-stage model of situational crime prevention
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WORTLEY, R. K.
- Abstract
In a recent critique of situational crime prevention (Wortley, 1997) it was argued that there are two distinct kinds of situational forces acting on behavior -- those which are responsible for precipitating action and those which regulate behavior by the opportunities they present. The present paper proposes a two-stage prevention model for conceptualising precipitating and regulating situational forces. There are two major implications of the model. First, it is suggested that by intervening at the precipitation stage some criminal behaviour can be averted prior to the offender experiencing any inclination to offend. This has particular implications for explaining why crime displacement often does not occur. Second, the model proposes a ‘feed-back loop’ by which, in some circumstances, excessive constraint can transform into a situational precipitator. This aspect of the model can be used to help explain counterproductive effects of some opportunity-reduction strategies. In the light of the model, the issue of ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ situational crime prevention is discussed.
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- 1998
12. Public awareness and auto-theft prevention: Getting it right for the wrong reason
- Author
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WORTLEY, R., Kane, R., and Gant, F.
- Abstract
This paper reports an evaluation of a public awareness campaign aimed at encouraging the use of car security measures, particularly Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) etching. It was found that the campaign coincided with an immediate reduction in the incidence of auto-theft. However, there did not appear to be any significant change in the behavior of car owners which would account for this reduction. Rather, it seems the reduction in thefts may have come about through an increased perception of risk the campaign generated among potential car thieves.
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- 1998
13. Guilt, shame and situational crime prevention
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WORTLEY, R. K.
- Abstract
This paper builds on Clarke and Homel's (in press) expansion of the situational crime prevention model, which includes new techniques for making the potential offender feel guilty or ashamed about their contemplated crime. In place of Clarke and Homel's single category of "inducing guilt or shame," two separate categories involving the manipulation of internal controls (guilt) and social controls (including shame) are proposed. The addition of these categories expands the repertoire of available crime prevention techniques by giving fuller recognition to the subtleties and complexities of the motivations to commit crime implicit in the rational choice perspective. It is argued that the new strategies also "soften" the narrow, target-hardening image of the situational approach, and may help researchers avoid counterproductive situational crime prevention effects.
- Published
- 1996
14. Prediction of Whistleblowing or Non-reporting Observation: The Role of Personal and Situational Factors
- Author
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Cassematis, P. G., primary and Wortley, R., additional
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- 2012
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15. Offenders' attachment and sexual abuse onset: a test of theoretical propositions.
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McKillop N, Smallbone S, Wortley R, and Andjic I
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- 2012
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16. An exploratory study of victim resistance in child sexual abuse: offender modus operandi and victim characteristics.
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Leclerc B, Wortley R, and Smallbone S
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- 2010
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17. Book Review: Person to Person — Ways of Communicating
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Wortley, R., primary
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- 1981
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18. Examining the extent to which hotspot analysis can support spatial predictions of crime
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Chainey, S., Wortley, R., and Longley, P.
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364 - Abstract
The premise that where crime has occurred previously, informs where crime is likely to occur in the future has long been used for geographically targeting police and public safety services. Hotspot analysis is the most applied technique that is based on this premise – using crime data to identify areas of crime concentration, and in turn predict where crime is likely to occur. However, the extent to which hotspot analysis can accurately predict spatial patterns of crime has not been comprehensively examined. The current research involves an examination of hotspot analysis techniques, measuring the extent to which these techniques accurately predict spatial patterns of crime. The research includes comparing the prediction performance of hotspot analysis techniques that are commonly used in policing and public safety, such as kernel density estimation, to spatial significance mapping techniques such as the Gi* statistic. The research also considers how different retrospective periods of crime data influence the accuracy of the predictions made by spatial analysis techniques, for different periods of the future. In addition to considering the sole use of recorded crime data for informing spatial predictions of crime, the research examines the use of geographically weighted regression for determining variables that statistically correlate with crime, and how these variables can be used to inform spatial crime prediction. The findings from the research result in introducing the crime prediction framework for aiding spatial crime prediction. The crime prediction framework illustrates the importance of aligning predictions for different periods of the future to different police and prevention response activities, with each future time period informed by different spatial analysis techniques and different retrospective crime data, underpinned with different theoretical explanations for predicting where crime is likely to occur.
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- 2014
19. The trafficking of British children within the UK for sexual exploitation : a situational analysis
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Cockbain, E. P., Wortley, R., and Thomas, C.
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364 - Abstract
The trafficking of British children within the United Kingdom for the purposes of sexual exploitation has been recognised as a crime threat for over a decade. Yet, the issue has been subject to little research and remains poorly-understood. The aim of this doctoral research was to provide an in-depth empirical assessment of this crime that could inform future evidence-based counter-measures. Located within a situational framework, this research focused on the immediate opportunity-structures to this crime. Due to the under-developed research-base the research question was framed in broad and inclusive terms: ‘What situational factors and processes contribute to the internal sex trafficking of British children and impede official responses?’. A rich combination of sources was employed, including extensive police operational files, court records and original interviews with convicted offenders, police investigators and prosecutors. A series of seven studies were conducted to disentangle key situational aspects of this complex process crime. Cohesion was provided by a consistent focus on six of the earliest and largest internal child sex trafficking operations in the UK to date. Distinguishing characteristics of the crime process, offenders and victims were identified and the implications for crime-reduction were explored. Particular attention was paid to assessing how the crime’s idiosyncrasies translate into challenges for investigation and prosecution. Overall, the crime was shown to be an inherently social phenomenon embedded in a complex web of interpersonal interactions and associations. Group structures, processes and dynamics were shown to promote, provoke, facilitate, sustain and spread patterns of abuse and to impede official responses. This research makes novel contributions to underdeveloped aspects of the international literatures on human trafficking, child sexual abuse, group crime and situational crime research. Its conceptual and empirical contributions on internal child sex trafficking are expected to benefit on-going and future developments in policy and practice.
- Published
- 2013
20. Designing police investigation strategies for child sex offending groups
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Brayley, H., Morgan, R., and Wortley, R.
- Subjects
616.99 - Abstract
Through a multi-method approach, this thesis uncovered the nature and characteristics of a hitherto little understood crime, internal child sex trafficking (ICST). This original large-scale study, the first of its kind in the UK, addressed an important knowledge gap in the literature and publications from this thesis have been used to support new investigations, policy development and to guide further academic research. Through access to sensitive and restricted documents and case files, this thesis explored the group-based element to ICST offending and identified patterns and typologies. Through identified commonalities among ICST cases, the thesis focused on supporting future investigations and prosecutions through four main approaches. First, an exploration of different group-based factors to ICST was conducted. This included identifying methods of recruitment, such as introduction via another offender, and benefits to joining a group, such as additional access to children or abuse locations. Second, an assessment of investigative and prosecution strategies was conducted which showed a wide range of tactics being used with no consistent approach across force areas. Third, a forensic experimental study was conducted aimed at improving understanding around persistence of semen on stained then laundered clothing, a common scenario seen in ICST cases. The findings from this study showed that the tested samples contained enough DNA to produce a full profile for use in UK and international courts, an important development for supporting future ICST cases. Finally, an eight theme framework for understanding a group’s structure and function was developed and examined using SWOT analysis. Suggestions such as the use of undercover police officers or targeted awareness raising were presented as possible options for tackling ICST groups. To conclude, the thesis discussed the potential use of tactics employed in other crime investigations, including covert policing and the use of victim reception centres, when conducting future ICST operations.
- Published
- 2013
21. The effect of therapeutic and deterrent messages on Internet users attempting to access 'barely legal' pornography.
- Author
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Prichard J, Wortley R, Watters P, Spiranovic C, and Scanlan J
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- Humans, Male, Adolescent, Adult, Young Adult, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Child Abuse, Sexual legislation & jurisprudence, Child, United Kingdom, Erotica psychology, Erotica legislation & jurisprudence, Internet
- Abstract
Online child sexual abuse material (CSAM) is a growing problem. Prevention charities, such as Stop It Now! UK, use online messaging to dissuade users from viewing CSAM and to encourage them to consider anonymous therapeutic interventions. This experiment used a honeypot website that purported to contain barely legal pornography, which we treated as a proxy for CSAM. We examined whether warnings would dissuade males (18-30 years) from visiting the website. Participants (n = 474) who attempted to access the site were randomly allocated to one of four conditions. The control group went straight to the landing page (control; n = 100). The experimental groups encountered different warning messages: deterrence-themed with an image (D3; n = 117); therapeutic-themed (T1; n = 120); and therapeutic-themed with an image (T3; n = 137). We measured the click through to the site. Three quarters of the control group attempted to enter the pornography site, compared with 35 % to 47 % of the experimental groups. All messages were effective: D3 (odds ratio [OR] = 5.02), T1 (OR = 4.06) and T2 (OR = 3.05). Images did not enhance warning effectiveness. We argue that therapeutic and deterrent warnings are useful for CSAM-prevention., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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22. The Impact of a Public Health Campaign to Deter Viewing of Child Sexual Abuse Images Online: A Case Study of the UK Stop It Now! Campaign.
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Newman EF, Efthymiadou E, Quayle E, Squire T, Denis D, Wortley R, Beier KM, and Koukopoulos N
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- Humans, Child, United Kingdom, Male, Female, Adult, Public Health, Internet, Help-Seeking Behavior, Adolescent, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Health Promotion methods
- Abstract
Public campaigns offer an opportunity to prevent child sexual abuse by raising awareness and promoting help available to bystanders, victims, and those at risk of perpetrating the abuse. This paper explores the impact of The Lucy Faithfull Foundation's 'Stop It Now!' campaign in the UK (2015-2018) on help-seeking. Helpline calls (11,190 unique callers), website analytics (109,432 new website visitors) and three website-hosted surveys ( N = 252) provided data on help-seeking, awareness, and self-reported behavior. Results indicated that there were more visitors to the help website during active campaigning periods, and helpline callers and website visitors were more likely to seek help after viewing campaign materials during active than non-active campaign periods. Help-seekers were predominantly men concerned about their own behavior. Survey 2 respondents concerned about their own behavior ( n = 53) indicated that their awareness of the law (75.5%), and legal and personal consequences (67.9%) had changed after hearing about the campaign, and 66% reported a change in behavior. Public health campaigns may be an effective way to promote help-seeking and prevent abuse., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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23. Accessing child sexual abuse material: Pathways to offending and online behaviour.
- Author
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Wortley R, Findlater D, Bailey A, and Zuhair D
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Child, Middle Aged, Erotica psychology, Internet, Young Adult, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Criminals psychology
- Abstract
Background: Most research examining the consumption of online child sexual abuse material (CSAM) has focused on offenders' demographic and psychological characteristics. While such research may assist in the development of therapeutic interventions with known offenders, it has little to offer the development of interventions for the vast majority of offenders who are never caught., Objective: To learn more about the offending strategies of CSAM offenders, in order to inform prevention efforts to deter, disrupt, and divert individuals from their pursuit of CSAM., Participants & Setting: Seventy-five male CSAM offenders, who were living in the community and were voluntarily participating in a treatment programme., Methods: Participants completed a detailed self-report questionnaire focussing on their pathways to offending and their online behaviour., Results: Most participants reported that they did not initially seek out CSAM but that they first encountered it inadvertently or became curious after viewing legal pornography. Their involvement in CSAM subsequently progressed over time and their offending generally became more serious. The most notable feature of participants' online behaviour was the relative lack of sophisticated technical expertise. Opportunity and other situational factors emerged as mediators of offending frequency. Offending patterns were affected by participants' psychological states (e.g., depression, anger, stress), offline relationships and commitments (e.g., arguments with spouse, loss of job), and online experiences (e.g., blocked sites, viruses, warning messages)., Conclusions: Findings suggest that many offenders are receptive to change and may be potentially diverted from their offending pathway., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that there are no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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24. Noncompleted Sexual Offenses: Internal States, Risks and Difficulties Related to Crime Commission through the Lens of Sexual Offenders.
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Leclerc B, Wortley R, Reynald D, Cook A, and Cale J
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- Male, Adult, Humans, Crime, Surveys and Questionnaires, Self Report, Criminals, Sex Offenses, Crime Victims
- Abstract
The study aims to generate insights from sexual offenders on the influence of internal states and how they perceive risks of apprehension and difficulties in the context of noncompleted sexual offenses, that is when offenders initiated the offense but were stopped or discouraged either before or during sexual contact. Adult males incarcerated for sexually offending completed a self-report questionnaire. Regression models, including interaction effects, were estimated. Two interaction effects were found providing insights into which and how internal states, such as intoxication to alcohol, may influence perceived difficulties related to crime. Future research should promote the investigation of noncompleted sexual offenses, which could provide a real opportunity to generate new or complementary insights for better understanding and guiding prevention initiatives.
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- 2023
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25. Effects of Automated Messages on Internet Users Attempting to Access "Barely Legal" Pornography.
- Author
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Prichard J, Wortley R, Watters PA, Spiranovic C, Hunn C, and Krone T
- Subjects
- Child, Family, Humans, Internet, Sexual Behavior, Child Abuse, Sexual, Erotica
- Abstract
With the increasing number of individuals accessing online child sexual exploitation material (CSEM), there is an urgent need for primary prevention strategies to supplement the traditional focus on arrest and prosecution. We examined whether online warning messages would dissuade individuals from visiting a honeypot website purporting to contain barely legal pornography. Participants ( n = 419) seeking the site were randomly assigned to one of five conditions; they went straight to the landing page (control; n = 100) or encountered a warning message advising of the potential harm to viewers ( n = 74), potential harm to victims ( n = 65), ability of police to track IP addresses ( n = 81), or possible illegality of such pornography ( n = 99). We measured the attempted click-through to the site. Attrition rates for the warning message conditions were 38% to 52%, compared with 27% for the control group. The most effective messages were those that warned that IP addresses can be traced (odds ratio [OR] = 2.64) and that the pornography may be illegal (OR = 2.99). We argue that warning messages offer a valuable and cost-effective strategy that can be scaled up to help reduce the accessing of CSEM online.
- Published
- 2022
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26. Situational Crime Prevention in Sexual Offenses Against Women: Offenders Tell Us What Works and What Doesn't.
- Author
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Chiu YN, Leclerc B, Reynald DM, and Wortley R
- Subjects
- Australia, Crime, Female, Humans, Crime Victims, Criminals, Sex Offenses prevention & control
- Abstract
This study examined the perceived effectiveness of situational crime prevention (SCP) in sexual assault as rated by 140 offenders convicted for sex offenses against women in Australia. Participants were presented with three scenarios and asked to rate the perceived effectiveness of SCP techniques relating to guardianship, victim self-protective behavior, and crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED). Results indicate that the effectiveness of SCP methods was perceived to vary across different contexts. For offenses occurring in the private setting of an offender's home, victim self-protective behavior was seen as most effective, followed by guardianship and CPTED. In public settings, although the perceived effectiveness of victim self-protective behavior remained the same, guardianship and CPTED were rated as significantly more effective. Further variations were identified regarding specific strategies. Findings highlight the nuances of offender decision making in different situations and environments, and provide the first empirical comparisons of SCP perceptions among sex offenders.
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- 2021
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27. Criminal Careers Among Female Perpetrators of Family and Nonfamily Homicide in Australia.
- Author
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Eriksson L, McPhedran S, Caman S, Mazerolle P, Wortley R, and Johnson H
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Child, Female, Homicide, Humans, Prevalence, Criminals, Women
- Abstract
Knowledge of women's pathways to serious offending, including homicide, is limited. This study contributes to a small but growing body of literature examining the criminal careers of serious female offenders by using interview data with females convicted of murder or manslaughter in Australia to examine various dimensions of their criminal careers, specifically, prevalence, frequency, age of onset, duration, and offending variety. In particular, in this study we compared criminal career dimensions across women who had killed a family member (e.g., intimate partner, children) and those whose victims were not part of the family unit (i.e., acquaintances or strangers). Our findings reveal differences between female homicide offenders who kill within and outside of the family unit. Although both groups had comparable overall lifetime prevalence of self-reported participation in criminal offending, findings indicate that participation among the family group was typically at low levels of frequency, of limited duration, and with relatively little variety in categories of offending. The family group also reported lower contact with the criminal justice system compared with the nonfamily group, and were less likely to have experienced some form of criminal/legal sanction in the 12 months prior to the homicide incident. This suggests that women who kill family members are more "conventional" than their nonfamily counterparts, in terms of having low and time-limited (i.e., short duration) lifetime participation in criminal offending.
- Published
- 2021
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28. Alcohol and drug problems among Australian homicide offenders.
- Author
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Eriksson L, Bryant S, McPhedran S, Mazerolle P, and Wortley R
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Homicide, Humans, Criminals, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Most homicide studies focus upon 'acute' situational intoxication as opposed to 'chronic' substance misuse. The aims of the study were to: (1) determine the extent of homicide offenders' alcohol and drug use in the year preceding the homicide; (2) compare the individual characteristics of homicide offenders across levels of problematic substance use; and (3) compare homicide incident characteristics across levels of problematic substance use., Design and Setting: Observational study using data collected through face-to-face interviews in custodial and community correctional settings across Australia. Participants were recruited through an opt-in process., Participants: The data consist of 302 individuals convicted of murder or manslaughter., Measurements: We used the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test and Drug Abuse Screening Test to determine problematic alcohol or drug use. We also used a range of self-report measures to ascertain offender characteristics [socio-demographics, developmental experiences, criminal history, personality] and incident characteristics (who was killed, and situational intoxication)., Findings: Of the sample, 38.8% displayed high levels of alcohol problems and 30.8% displayed high levels of drug problems. Those displaying high levels of alcohol and/or drug problems were more likely than those without high levels of alcohol and/or drug problems to report adverse developmental experiences, low education, financial difficulties, extensive criminal histories and high levels of trait anger, impulsivity and risk-seeking. In addition, offenders with problematic substance use were more likely to have killed non-family and to have used substances at the time of the homicide., Conclusions: High proportions of homicide offenders in Australia appear to have problematic substance use in the year preceding the homicide offence, and such use appears to be associated with a range of other challenging factors, including adverse childhoods, criminal involvement, low socio-economic factors and low self-regulation., (© 2020 Society for the Study of Addiction.)
- Published
- 2021
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29. What Deters Child Sex Offenders? A Comparison Between Completed and Noncompleted Offenses.
- Author
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Wortley R, Leclerc B, Reynald DM, and Smallbone S
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Pedophilia prevention & control, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Criminals psychology, Pedophilia psychology, Sex Offenses psychology
- Abstract
This study examined the role of the reaction of the victim, the nature of the physical setting, and the proximity of third parties in deterring offenders from completing an act of child sexual abuse (CSA). A self-report study was conducted with 238 adult males serving a custodial sentence for CSA, of whom 82 identified an occasion in which they had tried to have sexual contact with a child but did not because they were stopped or discouraged. We examined the situational characteristics of the noncompleted offense and compared these with the most recent completed offense by the same offenders. The most common reason for stopping the noncompleted offense, given by more than half of the participants, was the negative reaction of the child, and in particular, the direct request by the child to stop. Actual or potential actions by third parties were the next most cited reasons, with around a quarter of cases stopped because the offender was interrupted. In comparison to the noncomplete offense, in the completed offense the child was more likely to be younger and to be perceived as a willing participant. The most common suggestion for what might have stopped the completed offense, endorsed almost universally, was a negative reaction from the child. Factors that increased the chance of being detected-someone being nearby and the possibility of being observed-were also strongly endorsed. We argue that the findings provide the basis for devising offense-focused prevention strategies for CSA.
- Published
- 2019
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30. Characteristics of Homicide-Suicide in Australia: A Comparison With Homicide-Only and Suicide-Only Cases.
- Author
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McPhedran S, Eriksson L, Mazerolle P, De Leo D, Johnson H, and Wortley R
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- Adult, Australia, Crime Victims psychology, Criminal Psychology, Female, Homicide trends, Humans, Male, Social Environment, Suicide trends, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data, Homicide psychology, Social Values, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Homicide-suicide represents one of the rarest forms of lethal violence but often precipitates calls to revise social, health, and justice policies. However, there is little empirical information about this type of violence. The current study uses two unique data sets to examine a wide range of individual and situational characteristics of homicide-suicide, with particular emphasis on establishing whether and how homicide-suicide differs from homicide-only and suicide-only. Findings suggest homicide-suicide may have unique characteristics that set it apart from both homicide-only and suicide-only, as well as sharing certain other characteristics with those two types of events.
- Published
- 2018
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31. Towards a 'smart' cost-benefit tool: using machine learning to predict the costs of criminal justice policy interventions.
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Manning M, Wong GTW, Graham T, Ranbaduge T, Christen P, Taylor K, Wortley R, Makkai T, and Skorich P
- Abstract
Background: The Manning Cost-Benefit Tool (MCBT) was developed to assist criminal justice policymakers, policing organisations and crime prevention practitioners to assess the benefits of different interventions for reducing crime and to select those strategies that represent the greatest economic return on investment., Discussion: A challenge with the MCBT and other cost-benefit tools is that users need to input, manually, a considerable amount of point-in-time data, a process that is time consuming, relies on subjective expert opinion, and introduces the potential for data-input error. In this paper, we present and discuss a conceptual model for a 'smart' MCBT that utilises machine learning techniques., Summary: We argue that the Smart MCBT outlined in this paper will overcome the shortcomings of existing cost-benefit tools. It does this by reintegrating individual cost-benefit analysis (CBA) projects using a database system that securely stores and de-identifies project data, and redeploys it using a range of machine learning and data science techniques. In addition, the question of what works is respecified by the Smart MCBT tool as a data science pipeline, which serves to enhance CBA and reconfigure the policy making process in the paradigm of open data and data analytics.
- Published
- 2018
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32. Predictors of victim disclosure in child sexual abuse: Additional evidence from a sample of incarcerated adult sex offenders.
- Author
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Leclerc B and Wortley R
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Crime Victims psychology, Criminals psychology, Prisoners psychology, Truth Disclosure
- Abstract
The under-reporting of child sexual abuse by victims is a serious problem that may prolong the suffering of victims and leave perpetrators free to continue offending. Yet empirical evidence indicates that victim disclosure rates are low. In this study, we perform regression analysis with a sample of 369 adult child sexual offenders to examine potential predictors of victim disclosure. Specifically, we extend the range of previously examined potential predictors of victim disclosure and investigate interaction effects in order to better capture under which circumstances victim disclosure is more likely. The current study differs from previous studies in that it examines the impact of victim and offense variables on victim disclosure from the perspective of the offender. In line with previous studies, we found that disclosure increased with the age of the victim and if penetration had occurred. In addition, we found that disclosure increased when the victim came from a non-dysfunctional family and resisted the abuse. The presence of an interaction effect highlighted the impact of the situation on victim disclosure. This effect indicated that as victims get older, they are more likely to disclose the abuse when they are not living with the offender at the time of abuse, but less likely to do so when they are living with the offender at the time of abuse. These findings are discussed in relation to previous studies and the need to facilitate victim disclosure., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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33. Prevention nearby: the influence of the presence of a potential guardian on the severity of child sexual abuse.
- Author
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Leclerc B, Smallbone S, and Wortley R
- Subjects
- Adult, Australia, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Sexual Behavior, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Child Abuse, Sexual statistics & numerical data, Legal Guardians psychology, Legal Guardians statistics & numerical data, Sex Offenses prevention & control, Sex Offenses psychology
- Abstract
The main aim of this study was to examine the effect of a potential guardian on the severity of child sexual abuse. Using data obtained on crime events from adult child sexual offenders incarcerated in Queensland (Australia), mixed-effects logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine the effect of potential guardianship on the severity of abuse. Controlling for victim and situational characteristics, the analyses showed that the presence of a potential guardian reduced the duration of sexual contact and the occurrence of penetration. Presence of a potential guardian decreased the risk of sexual penetration by 86%. The study highlights the importance of the presence of a potential guardian for reducing the severity of child sexual abuse, and suggests more broadly that guardianship may be an important protective factor in sexual offending., (© The Author(s) 2013.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A criminal careers typology of child sexual abusers.
- Author
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Wortley R and Smallbone S
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual statistics & numerical data, Crime classification, Criminals statistics & numerical data, Female, Forensic Psychiatry, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Prisoners statistics & numerical data, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Child Abuse, Sexual classification, Criminals classification, Prisoners classification
- Abstract
We present a criminal careers typology of child sexual abusers constructed in terms of their offending persistence (persistent vs. limited) and versatility (specialized vs. versatile). Analyses were conducted on the official records of 362 convicted offenders, 213 of whom also provided confidential self-report data on their personal and offending histories. Forty-one percent of the sample were currently serving sentences for their first sexual offense conviction(s) but had at least one prior conviction for a nonsexual offense (limited/versatile); 36.4% had no previous convictions of any kind (limited/specialized); 17.8% had prior convictions for sexual and nonsexual offenses (persistent/versatile); and 4.8% had prior convictions for sexual offenses only (persistent/specialized). These four groups differed on a range of personal and offense-related variables, including abuse histories, sexual orientation, age at first sexual contact with a child, number of victims, duration of sexual involvement with victims, victim gender, and whether victims were familial or nonfamilial. These differences suggest the need to adopt different treatment and prevention strategies that target the specific characteristics of each group., (© The Author(s) 2013.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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35. John Snow's legacy: epidemiology without borders.
- Author
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Fine P, Victora CG, Rothman KJ, Moore PS, Chang Y, Curtis V, Heymann DL, Slutkin G, May RM, Patel V, Roberts I, Wortley R, Torgerson C, and Deaton A
- Subjects
- Causality, Cholera epidemiology, Cholera genetics, Congresses as Topic, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Crime, England, Humans, Hygiene, Mental Disorders therapy, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Research education, Risk Factors, Sarcoma, Kaposi epidemiology, Violence, Epidemiologic Methods, Epidemiology, Sarcoma, Kaposi embryology
- Abstract
This Review provides abstracts from a meeting held at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, on April 11-12, 2013, to celebrate the legacy of John Snow. They describe conventional and unconventional applications of epidemiological methods to problems ranging from diarrhoeal disease, mental health, cancer, and accident care, to education, poverty, financial networks, crime, and violence. Common themes appear throughout, including recognition of the importance of Snow's example, the philosophical and practical implications of assessment of causality, and an emphasis on the evaluation of preventive, ameliorative, and curative interventions, in a wide variety of medical and societal examples. Almost all self-described epidemiologists nowadays work within the health arena, and this is the focus of most of the societies, journals, and courses that carry the name epidemiology. The range of applications evident in these contributions might encourage some of these institutions to consider broadening their remits. In so doing, they may contribute more directly to, and learn from, non-health-related areas that use the language and methods of epidemiology to address many important problems now facing the world., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Victim resistance in child sexual abuse: a look into the efficacy of self-protection strategies based on the offender's experience.
- Author
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Leclerc B, Wortley R, and Smallbone S
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual statistics & numerical data, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Rape statistics & numerical data, Social Environment, Verbal Behavior, Young Adult, Aggression psychology, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Crime Victims psychology, Criminals statistics & numerical data, Rape psychology
- Abstract
This study examines the efficacy, as experienced by offenders with their victim, of self-protection strategies used in child sexual abuse cases. It also investigates whether the efficacy of self-protection varies according to victim characteristics. The sample consists of 94 adult offenders who sexually abused a single child and who agreed to provide confidential self-report data on the efficacy of self-protection strategies used by their victim. Strategies taken into account are: (1) yelling or screaming, (2) fighting back, (3) saying no, (4) saying they didn't want to, (5) crying, (6) telling someone else about the abuse, (7) saying they were scared, (8) demanding to be left alone, (9) saying they would tell someone, (10) saying that people are not supposed to touch their private parts, (11) trying to get away, and (12) yelling for help. Saying that they do not want to have sexual contact and saying "no" to the offender are the most effective strategies. Because they are more likely to use self-protection initially, younger girls are also more likely to prevent episodes of abuse than older girls.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Sex differences in the interaction of drinking, positive expectancies and symptoms of dependence in young adults.
- Author
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Williams RJ and Wortley RK
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholic Intoxication psychology, Alcoholism diagnosis, Female, Humans, Male, New South Wales, Risk Factors, Social Behavior, Social Environment, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Alcoholism psychology, Gender Identity, Set, Psychology
- Abstract
Current levels of self-reported drinking amongst young adults predicted scores on measures of both positive expectancies for alcohol use and negative alcohol effects (symptoms of dependence). No overall sex difference was shown in the main effects, but there was a significant interaction effect between sex and alcohol consumption on the dependency and expectancy scales. The form of this interaction was different for expectancy and dependency scores. There was a cross-over effect in the case of expectancy: light drinking females revealed lower levels of expectancy than did light drinking males whereas heavier drinking females reported higher levels of expectancy than did males at a comparable level of consumption. There was a higher proportion of heavy female drinkers in this sample than is usually reported. With regard to dependence, the trend in sex differences was divergent: whereas males acknowledged increases in symptoms concomitant with increases in consumption, comparable female drinkers reported relatively little increase in such symptoms. Results were discussed in terms of quantity-related concepts of 'utility' of alcohol use and a 'diminished personal harm' rationalization associated with the negative effects of alcohol.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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