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First published on February 29, 2008, doi:10.1177/0011128707308160

Crime & Delinquency 2008;54:532.

A more recent version of this article appeared on October 1, 2008


Article

Sex Crimes, Children, and Pornography: Public Views and Public Policy

Daniel P. Mears, Ph.D*, Christina Mancini, M.S., Marc Gertz, Ph.D, and Jake Bratton, M.S.

Florida State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dmears{at}fsu.edu.


   Abstract
"Get tough" approaches for responding to sex crimes have proliferated during the past decade. Child pornography in particular has garnered attention in recent years. Policy makers increasingly have emphasized incarceration as a response to such crime, including accessing child pornography. Juxtaposed against such efforts is a dearth of knowledge about "get tough" policies for responding to sex crimes, particularly those targeting children, and how most appropriately to respond to such crimes. The authors examine data from a national telephone survey of Americans to explore views toward sex crimes, with a special emphasis on crimes against children. The findings indicate the public supports tough responses to child sex crimes, but they also support treatment of sex offenders. Also, despite views that incarceration is an appropriate response to possessing child pornography, several social and demographic cleavages in such support exist. The authors discuss these findings and their implications for policy and research.


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