Why do men rape women? What causes an adult to sexually molest a child? Understanding why sexual deviance occurs, how it develops, and how it changes over time is essential in preventing sexual predation and designing intervention programs for relapse prevention.

Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies

addresses the biological, developmental, cultural, and learning factors in the genesis of sexual deviancy and links those theories to interventions with sex offenders. Edited by renowned sexual behavior experts Tony Ward, D. Richard Laws, and Stephen M. Hudson, this exceptional volume is divided into two sections. The first section covers explanations for sexual deviance, including ethical issues and classification systems for sexually deviant disorders. The second section addresses responses to sexual deviance, including traditional and modern intervention approaches.

An eminent group of scholars, researchers, and clinicians examine

The “whys” behind sexual deviance; Controversies surrounding offender rehabilitation; The relationship between theory and practice; All paraphilias including molestation and sexual assault; Cutting edge developments in etiology, rehabilitation, and practice

Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies

provides a comprehensive view of the psychological, biological, cultural, and situational factors that predispose sex offenders. Some of the world's leading authorities in the area of understanding and treating sex offenders discuss, debate, and review the ideas and values underpinning research and treatment of sexual deviance.

Tailored for advanced undergraduate and graduate students in courses on abnormal psychology, psychopathology, forensic psychology, and criminology, Sexual Deviance: Issues and Controversies is also essential reading for psychologists, criminal justice professionals, and policy makers.

Harm Reduction and Sexual Offending: Is an Intraparadigmatic Shift Possible?

Harm Reduction and Sexual Offending: Is an Intraparadigmatic Shift Possible?

Harm reduction and sexual offending: Is an intraparadigmatic shift possible?
D. RichardLawsSouth Island Consulting Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

It is not really possible to be for or against harm reduction. Harm reduction is what we do all the time.

—P. Denning (2000), Practicing Harm Reduction Psychotherapy

What Is Harm Reduction?

The classical model of relapse prevention (RP; Daley, 1991; Laws, 1995b; Marlatt & Gordon, 1985; Wanigaratne, Wallace, Pullin, Keaney, & Farmer, 1990) has its roots in the drug and alcohol field. RP has now been applied to a variety of behavioral disorders in addition to drugs and alcohol (e.g., Wilson, 1992). The application to sex offenders has been under way since the mid-1980s (Pithers, Marques, Gibat, & Marlatt, 1983), and ...

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