Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective

A research paper submitted to the Proceeding of the World Conference on Child and Youth, Vol. 1, 2019, pp. 1-11

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Autor principal: Bakta, Seraphina M.
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:inglés
Publicado: World Conference on Child and Youth 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://doi.org/10.17501/26731037.2019.1101
https://scholar.mzumbe.ac.tz/handle/123456789/683
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author Bakta, Seraphina M.
author_facet Bakta, Seraphina M.
author_sort Bakta, Seraphina M.
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spelling oai:null:123456789-6832024-04-21T17:54:31Z Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective Bakta, Seraphina M. Attitudes child victim poverty sexual abuse superstition A research paper submitted to the Proceeding of the World Conference on Child and Youth, Vol. 1, 2019, pp. 1-11 Children who are sexually abused are likely to encounter discrimination, feel blameworthy, and a lack of support from the very people who should support them. Questions asked of the victim, such as “why were you raped," are the norm, though it is the perpetrator who should be asked why he raped. More importantly, poverty in families is both a cause and an effect of child sexual abuse. This paper employs doctrinal research methodology to examine the attitudes to, and cultural perspectives of, child sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty-reduction policies in addressing child sexual abuse. It is argued that there is a link between cultural ideologies and poverty when it comes to child sexual abuse in Tanzania. There, for example, children are abused on the grounds of superstition and the belief that sexual intercourse by an adult with a child will make the perpetrator rich. Furthermore, because of poverty, families are reluctant to report sexual abuse committed within the confines of the family, especially when the perpetrator is a breadwinner, or when there is “compensation”. This paper concludes that, despite the fact that Tanzania has taken various measures to address child sexual abuse, cultural ideologies should be addressed hand in hand with comprehensive policies on poverty reduction when addressing child sexual abuse. private 2024-04-17T11:33:00Z 2024-04-17T11:33:00Z 2019 Article Chicago 2673-1037 https://doi.org/10.17501/26731037.2019.1101 https://scholar.mzumbe.ac.tz/handle/123456789/683 en application/pdf World Conference on Child and Youth
spellingShingle Attitudes
child victim
poverty
sexual abuse
superstition
Bakta, Seraphina M.
Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title_full Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title_fullStr Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title_short Attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries: A Tanzanian perspective
title_sort attitudes on children victims of sexual abuse and the relevance of poverty reduction policies in developing countries a tanzanian perspective
topic Attitudes
child victim
poverty
sexual abuse
superstition
url https://doi.org/10.17501/26731037.2019.1101
https://scholar.mzumbe.ac.tz/handle/123456789/683
work_keys_str_mv AT baktaseraphinam attitudesonchildrenvictimsofsexualabuseandtherelevanceofpovertyreductionpoliciesindevelopingcountriesatanzanianperspective