Talking about non-recent child sexual abuse: Survivor, Clinician and Researcher perspectives

Editor : Daniel Taggart, Editor : Joanne Stubley

Talking about non-recent child sexual abuse: Survivor, Clinician and Researcher perspectives

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : January 2000
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 312
  • Category :
    Forthcoming
  • Category 2 :
    Child and Adolescent Studies
  • Catalogue No : 98525
  • ISBN 13 : 9781032670294
  • ISBN 10 : 1032670290

Also by Joanne Stubley

Complex Trauma: The Tavistock Model

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This book addresses the issue of non-recent child sex abuse and its long-term impact on adult survivors from a broadly psychodynamic perspective.

Non-recent CSA is not a subject that can or should be confined to the clinical arena. It has legal, welfare and profound social implications, with its impact broadening out from the survivor to the family to the community and into wider society. The politics of power and oppression are intertwined with the experience and may be unconsciously repeated into adult experiences, often worsened by the interplay of intersectionality and the withdrawal of public services and support for people with complex mental health problems. This book has been developed to support survivors, families, practitioners and the wider public break the social taboo around the topic of child sexual abuse. It unites a broad range of voices to encourage better community support and improve social services to support those impacted.

With an ethical commitment to the field, this book will appeal to clinicians working in mental health but will also hold interest to those in other fields such as the social sciences, as well as the interested public, and CSA survivors in particular.

Table of Contents


Introduction
Daniel Taggart & Joanne Stubley


Chapter 1: Scene setting

1. Survivors Speak About Trust and the (un)Trustworthiness of Service Providers
Susanna Alyce

2. What is meant by Disclosure
Emma Facer-Irwin

3. “To think about what we are doing”- Childhood sexual abuse and disciplinary trustworthiness
Daniel Taggart

4. Disclosure and Recovery
Laura Salter


Chapter 2: Intersectionality

5. Disclosure and Difference: barriers based in minority experience
Michael May

6. “I didn’t think I had rights that protected me as a human being”. Exploring the Lived Experiences of Child Sexual Abuse in Ethnic Minority Communities
Kiki Hassen

7. Shooting the Messenger and The Curse of Cassandra: The Impact of childhood and adult rape and torture on adults who report mind control, abuse by psychotherapists, homophobic and transgender abuse.


Chapter 3: Words and silence

8. Why language matters while talking about trauma.
Maria Podlejska-Eyres

9. Silent, silenced, and silencing: Understanding society’s silences, how survivors are silenced, and why some survivors remain silent through memoirs of child sexual abuse.
William Tantam


Chapter 4: Clinical Perspectives

10. Shame and Neglect
Sara Scott

11. What can we Learn from Children about the Disclosure of Trauma and Abuse?
Jess Chown

12. Challenging the binaries in relational trauma
Nicola Godwin


Chapter 5: the Professionals

13. Communications From the Edge of Disclosure: Responses in art from psychotherapists working in an NHS specialist service for adult survivors of child sexual abuse.
Maggie Schaedel

14. The importance and struggle for teams to think reflectively when working with people who have experienced childhood sexual abuse.
Louise Allnutt


Chapter 6: Systemic and social perspectives

15. Repetitions and Re-enactments of NRCSA trauma within the mental health system.
Joanne Stubley

16.Interrupting Silence: Tuning in to the movements calling out for change.
Khadija Rouf

17. Contagions of shame, dignity and connection: Working in the field of childhood sexual abuse
Daniel Taggart and Katie Wright

About the Editor(s)

Dr Daniel Taggart is a reader in clinical psychology at the University of Essex. He previously worked as the clinical lead for the Truth Project and principal psychologist at the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse.

Joanne Stubley is a medical psychotherapist and psychoanalyst. She is the lead clinician of the Tavistock Trauma Service and has co-chaired the Royal College of Psychiatrists expert reference group on NRCSA. She is co-author with Linda Young of Complex Trauma: The Tavistock Model, which was nominated for a Gravida Award in 2022.

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