Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns

This thesis aims to provide a broad overview of contemporary challenges in relation to sexual offending, with specific focus being placed on the need to balance the public’s perceptions of those convicted of sexual offences with the reality of their offence patterns, to determine what risk society r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wynn, Chelsea
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51147/
_version_ 1848798428366110720
author Wynn, Chelsea
author_facet Wynn, Chelsea
author_sort Wynn, Chelsea
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis aims to provide a broad overview of contemporary challenges in relation to sexual offending, with specific focus being placed on the need to balance the public’s perceptions of those convicted of sexual offences with the reality of their offence patterns, to determine what risk society really faces from these individuals. In doing this, it incorporates diverse methods, including a systematic review, an empirical research study, an individual case study and a critique of a psychometric measure. Following a general introduction in Chapter 1, Chapter 2 presents a systematic evaluation of 13 studies investigating public perceptions of sexual offenders, with specific focus on comparing public demographic variables as predictors of these attitudes. It was found that overall; the public’s perceptions were negative, with beliefs about high recidivism rates amongst other misperceptions. Demographic characteristics were shown to be inconsistent in predicting punitive judgments. Level of educational attainment was the only demographic variable investigated that was consistently associated, with higher levels of education resulting in more positive perceptions. In Chapter 3, the offence patterns of repeat sexual offenders are investigated, including an analysis of whether this population escalate, de-escalate or remain stable over time. The results indicate an overall pattern of stability, indicating that sexual recidivists commit the same category of offence from one offence to the next. However, escalation was also common, a finding that warrants further exploration. Chapter 4 explores the factors that contribute to the onset and escalation of the offence behaviours of a repeat sexual offender, through the use of psychological formulation. Results indicated that a different set of risk factors contributed to the onset of the client’s offending compared to those that contributed to escalation. Chapter 5 evaluates the Community Attitudes Toward Sex Offenders (CATSO) scale (Church, Wakeman, Miller, Clements, & Sun, 2008), an assessment measure used in Chapter 2. Finally, Chapter 6 provides a discussion and conclusion to the thesis, drawing together the implications of the research.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:19:37Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-51147
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:19:37Z
publishDate 2018
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-511472025-02-28T14:04:40Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51147/ Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns Wynn, Chelsea This thesis aims to provide a broad overview of contemporary challenges in relation to sexual offending, with specific focus being placed on the need to balance the public’s perceptions of those convicted of sexual offences with the reality of their offence patterns, to determine what risk society really faces from these individuals. In doing this, it incorporates diverse methods, including a systematic review, an empirical research study, an individual case study and a critique of a psychometric measure. Following a general introduction in Chapter 1, Chapter 2 presents a systematic evaluation of 13 studies investigating public perceptions of sexual offenders, with specific focus on comparing public demographic variables as predictors of these attitudes. It was found that overall; the public’s perceptions were negative, with beliefs about high recidivism rates amongst other misperceptions. Demographic characteristics were shown to be inconsistent in predicting punitive judgments. Level of educational attainment was the only demographic variable investigated that was consistently associated, with higher levels of education resulting in more positive perceptions. In Chapter 3, the offence patterns of repeat sexual offenders are investigated, including an analysis of whether this population escalate, de-escalate or remain stable over time. The results indicate an overall pattern of stability, indicating that sexual recidivists commit the same category of offence from one offence to the next. However, escalation was also common, a finding that warrants further exploration. Chapter 4 explores the factors that contribute to the onset and escalation of the offence behaviours of a repeat sexual offender, through the use of psychological formulation. Results indicated that a different set of risk factors contributed to the onset of the client’s offending compared to those that contributed to escalation. Chapter 5 evaluates the Community Attitudes Toward Sex Offenders (CATSO) scale (Church, Wakeman, Miller, Clements, & Sun, 2008), an assessment measure used in Chapter 2. Finally, Chapter 6 provides a discussion and conclusion to the thesis, drawing together the implications of the research. 2018-07-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51147/1/Final%20Thesis.pdf Wynn, Chelsea (2018) Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns. DForenPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Sex crimes; Sex offenders; Public opinion; Offence behaviours
spellingShingle Sex crimes; Sex offenders; Public opinion; Offence behaviours
Wynn, Chelsea
Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title_full Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title_fullStr Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title_full_unstemmed Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title_short Moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
title_sort moral panics or monstrous offenders?: balancing public perceptions of sexual offenders with their offence patterns
topic Sex crimes; Sex offenders; Public opinion; Offence behaviours
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/51147/