Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Professor Claudia Bernard
1. Introduction
Aisha K. Gill and Hannah Begum
2. Epistemic injustice: Racially marginalised adult survivors of child sexual abuse Geetanjali Gangoli and Marianne Hester
3. Understanding the experiences of British South Asian male survivors of child sexual abuse
Hannah Begum and Aisha K. Gill
4.
Maternal Mimesis: The impact of intersectional abuse on African-Caribbean British maternal responses to 'tellings' of child sexual abuse by daughters
Joanne Wilson
5. Preserving what for whom?' Female victim/survivor perspectives on the silence behind child sexual abuse in Britain's South Asian communities
Vanisha Jassal
6. Survivors speak up: Improving police responses to sexual abuse cases in Black and racially minoritised communities
Aisha K. Gill and Yasmin Khan
7. Institutional responses to child sexual abuse in ethnic minority communities
Rachel Hurcombe, Theresa Redmond, Holly Rodger and Sophia King
8. Addressing harmful sexual behaviours among children and young people: Definitional and regulatory tensions
Elizabeth Agnew and Anne-Marie McAlinden
9.
He didn't want any of that: Considerations in the study and theorization of Black boys' sexual victimization in the United States
Tommy Curry
10.
Child sexual abuse in Latinx populations in the United States: An examination of cultural influences
Maureen C. Kenny, Claire Helpingstine and Maheshi Pathirana
11. Truth, trauma and healing: Stories of Aboriginal survivors of child sexual abuse in out-of-home care
Carlina Black, Muriel Bamblett and Margarita Frederico
12. The blurred line: Balancing the treatment of personality disorders, personal trauma, and cultural trauma among individuals who have sexually offended Michael P. Lasher
13. "Pussy power"? Reflecting on research practice with Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander men who have offended sexually
Jodi Death and Kelly Richards