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Journal Article

Citation

Quayle E, Taylor M. Cyberpsychol. Behav. 2001; 4(5): 597-608.

Affiliation

Department of Applied Psychology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. equayle@ucc.ie

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Mary Ann Liebert Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11725653

Abstract

This paper presents a case study of a man charged with the offense of downloading child pornography from the Internet. He had used the Internet to traffic child pornography, and, in addition, to locate children to abuse, to engage in inappropriate sexual communication with children, and to communicate with other pedophiles. Such offenses were facilitated by self-representing in Chat rooms as both a child and an adult. The case study illustrates how such offenders move through a repertoire of offending behavior and discusses the role that the Internet can play in supporting inappropriate and disinhibited sexual behavior that victimizes children through the trading of child pornography and possible child seduction. The Internet is seen to play a unique role in allowing individuals to self-represent aspects that might otherwise remain hidden or dormant.


Language: en

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