Dr Christine Harrison reacts to HMIC's post-inspection review of South Yorkshire Police. Dr Harrison from the University of Warwick’s Centre for Lifelong Learning is an experienced social worker who has co-ordinated and taught child care and child protection social work for the last 25 years. Christine who has carried out research in a number of areas, including images of child abuse, says:
“Men who sexually exploit children and young people are often well organised and audacious offenders who make sure that they target young women and men who are vulnerable, alienated from active adult support and who will not readily be believed.
Whilst the difficulties of policing child sexual exploitation should not be underestimated, what worries me more than anything from this recent review is that it continues to reveal the negligent attitudes and beliefs held about young people abused through sexual exploitation, epitomised by the review’s conclusion that some police officers were treating children with contempt.
However strong a child protection system is, it will be undermined by beliefs that some children matter more than others and this will leave children at risk of child sexual exploitation in a perilous, and sometimes life threatening, position.
It is most unlikely that Rotherham is the only city with high levels of child sexual exploitation, or that South Yorkshire Police Authority is the only force whose current responses are less than adequate.
As well as focusing on improving systems, equal attention will need to be placed on societal attitudes and values that contribute to the continued sexual victimisation of children and young people.”