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The Impact of Mental Illness and Intellectual Disability Information on General Public Perceptions of a Person Convicted of a Child Sex Offence. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • PCSOs (Persons Convicted of Sex Offences) face significant challenges when reintegrating into the community, including stigma, hostility, and difficulties with housing and employment.
  • An online survey showed that public attitudes toward PCSOs with mental illness or intellectual disabilities were more favorable than those toward neurotypical PCSOs, who were seen as posing a higher risk of reoffending.
  • Important demographic factors influenced perceptions, with women and older participants generally feeling more concern about the risks posed by PCSOs, underscoring the need for public education to promote better understanding and acceptance of neurodiverse individuals within this group.

Article Abstract

A person convicted of sex offences (PCSO) is confronted with several challenges upon re-entry to the community, often facing difficulties accessing housing and employment, and experiencing stigmatisation, hostility and harassment from community members. Given the importance of community support for successful reintegration, we examined differences in public ( = 117) attitudes toward a PCSO against a child (PCSO-C) with mental illness or intellectual disability compared to a neurotypical PCSO-C in an online survey. At present, differences in attitudes towards these groups has not been explored. Results indicated the PCSO-Cs with intellectual disability or mental illness were seen to pose less risk of sexual reoffending and prompted higher levels of reintegration comfort than the neurotypical PCSO-C. Participants' prior personal exposure to mental illness or intellectual disability was unrelated to attitudes, but those who believed that PCSOs in general have a low capacity for change attributed greater risk of sexual reoffending, greater risk of future harm to children, higher levels of blame and lower reintegration comfort, regardless of MI and ID information. Female participants also perceived greater risk of future harm to adults, and older participants estimated higher risk of sexual reoffending than younger participants. Findings have implications for community acceptance of PCSO-Cs and jury decision-making processes and highlight the importance of public education regarding neurodiverse PCSO-Cs and PCSO capacity for change to encourage knowledge-based judgements.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10790632231159072DOI Listing

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