The Perceptions of Australian Workers about Caring for Sexually Exploited Children in Residential Care

Gemma McKibbin & Cathy Humphreys - Child Abuse Review

Abstract

Child sexual exploitation (CSE) is a problem for children and young people living in out‐of‐home care (looked after children). As part of a broader action research project aiming to prevent both harmful sexual behaviour carried out by children and young people and CSE in out‐of‐home care, four focus groups were undertaken with 17 workers at three Victorian residential houses in 2017. The findings reported in this paper were generated through the research question: What do workers perceive as the key challenges in caring for children and young people vulnerable to CSE in out‐of‐home care? Three major themes were identified: (i) children and young people going missing from home; (ii) children and young people not identifying as victims; and (iii) frontline police response unhelpful when children and young people missing. The design of prevention and response strategies to combat CSE must take into account the challenges identified by workers to ensure the best possible sexual abuse prevention outcomes for children and young people living in residential care.

Key Practitioner Messages

  • Children and young people need to be educated about the tactics used by perpetrators so that they can recognise if they are being groomed or exploited.
  • Residential staff need to be upskilled about how to respond to children and young people at the point that they are leaving the house for the purpose of CSE.
  • Workers need to be empowered to make decisions about the day‐to‐day welfare of the children and young people in their care.
  • Multiagency collaboration is vital in preventing and responding to CSE, and efforts should be upscaled across all local government areas.