AI Article Synopsis

  • Some jurisdictions classify nonsexual offenses, like promoting prostitution of a minor, as sexual offenses, leading to similar penalties and policies for offenders.
  • A study analyzed 94 women convicted of sexual offenses to see if those convicted of promoting prostitution differed from traditional sexual offenders in terms of demographics and criminal history.
  • Findings indicate that women involved in promoting prostitution have more general criminal backgrounds and antisocial traits, suggesting that combining these groups in research may mask key differences in their behaviors.

Article Abstract

Some jurisdictions have legally decreed that certain nonsexual offenses (e.g., promoting prostitution of a minor, arson, burglary) can be considered sexual offenses. Offenders convicted of these crimes can be subjected to sexual offender-specific social control policies such as registration, as well as be included in sexual offender research such as recidivism studies. No studies, however, have systematically examined differences and similarities between this new class of sexual offenders and more traditional sexual offenders. The current study used a sample of 94 women convicted of sexual offenses to investigate whether women convicted of promoting prostitution of a minor differed on demographic and criminogenic features from those convicted of more traditional sexual offenses. Results show that women convicted of promoting prostitution offenses have criminal histories more consistent with general criminality and exhibit more general antisocial features than women convicted of traditional sexual offenses. These results support the notion that the inclusion of legally defined sexual offenders with traditional ones obscures important differences in criminogenic features among these women.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1079063214554959DOI Listing

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