Child Abuse And Exploitation

DSC_8635Although the exploitation of children is not a new phenomenon, the digital age has exacerbated the problem and increased children’s vulnerability. At a side event during the 23rd Session of the Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) launched a study on the effects of new technologies on the abuse and exploitation of children.

The event brought together experts from the fields of law enforcement and academia to present the study and discuss this issue of growing international concern.

Fast-paced technological innovation and widespread accessibility of information and communication technology (ICTs) have transformed societies around the world. Children in particular have unprecedented access to computers and mobile technologies, and have in recent decades tended to adopt these from an early age, resulting in ICTs becoming thoroughly embedded in their lives.

“Cyberspace is a place where children can be groomed with impunity, while the perpetrators remain hidden. By launching this study, UNODC and its partners are helping to bring online child abusers out of the shadows and into the judicial spotlight through better training and better investigative techniques among law enforcement officers,” said UNODC Executive Director Yury Fedotov.

The UNODC study is based on open source research on the issue and the outcomes of an informal expert group meeting held in Vienna in September 2013. It covers the main forms of ICT-facilitated child abuse and exploitation, including the creation and distribution of child sexual abuse material (child pornography); commercial sexual exploitation of children; caber-enticement, solicitation and grooming; cuber-bullying, cuber-harassment and cuber-stalking; as well as exposure to harmful content.

The study found that low prices for information and communication technology (ICT) devices and widely available high-speed internet leads to sex offenders having unprecedented access to materials and an online community to facilitate their abusive and exploitative behaviour. Through the internet, online predators gain access to children faster and in higher volumes, using chat rooms, emails, online games and social networking sites to find and groom victims.

The globalized and anonymous cyberspace environment also helps predators evade detection in new ways, and a multitude of technical challenges hinder governments’ abilities to identify and address child exploitation offences. Organized criminal networks also exploit the void, profiting from the commercial child pornography and child sex trafficking markets.

A number of international legal instruments require states to take measures to protect children from abuse and exploitation, as well as engage in international cooperation in the investigation and prosecution of child abuse and exploitation crimes. A lack of consistent and appropriate legislation across countries globally, however, remains a major impediment to successful investigations and prosecutions. Individual states vary considerably in their definitions of child abuse and exploitation, and often cannot move fast enough to enact laws that keep pace with technology.

The study also found that one of the greatest gaps in fighting online child abuse is the lack of skilled and dedicated personnel among law enforcement agencies in key investigative areas, such as handling digital evidence and conducting image analysis, profiling offenders, and the ability to develop networks to facilitate cooperation across jurisdictions and borders, among others.

Victim assistance is also an area where deficiencies were found, such as the absence of standard protocols for supporting victims through the investigative process, as well as appropriate techniques for interviewing young victims and collecting and preserving victim-related evidence.

The study noted that the private sector is also a key actor in the prevention of such crimes, as the main driving force among technological development worldwide. Self-regulation by internet service providers, self-monitoring by travel and tourism companies and the creation of financial and technology coalitions or coordination groups are some of suggested areas for improvement.

Preventive efforts are also key. Parents, guardians, child educators and civil society are a vital component in combating the problem, including by supporting children in understanding and handling online risks, “flagging” abusive and exploitative material online, and through the creation of telephone hotlines for reporting such crimes.

The UNODC study is accompanied by a proposed package of technical assistance for Member States to help combat this crime, which includes law enforcement and judicial training, activities for improved international cooperation and awareness raising tools.

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