ABSTRACT
The act of disclosure is a key moment in the process of bringing alleged child sexual abuse (CSA) to court and is, therefore, a frequent point of contention for lawyers. Yet no article has systematically addressed the current applied psychological literature regarding the act of disclosure by alleged CSA victims relating to the courtroom process. This is a survey-style literature review, which seeks to establish the factors necessary for academics, practitioners, jurors and policy makers alike to study in order to be fully informed about the domain of CSA disclosure both before and then inside the courtroom.Children often delay disclosing for a long period and this may be affected by specific case characteristics. Lawyers question children about their disclosures in very different ways with both the defence and prosecution utilizing developmentally inappropriate questioning methods to advance their respective arguments. Children also respond differently to the prosecution and defence, with variations in both content and detail provided within their answerA challenge exists to be able to balance the securing of accurate testimony – especially given developmental differences – with the freedom of defendants to challenge such crucial evidence in the manner of their choice. This article highlights some of the implications of the current system which can effect any optimum assessment of the important process of victim disclosure, both outside and within the courtroom.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1. Child Abuse and Neglect; Child Maltreatment; Legal and Criminological Psychology; Psychology, Crime & Law.
2. Michael E. Lamb (University of Cambridge, UK), Thomas D. Lyon (University of Southern California, USA), Yael Orbach (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, USA), Irit Hershkowitz (University of Haifa, Israel).
3. For more broad overviews on these factors please see: Lamb, M. E., La Rooy, D., Katz, C., & Malloy, L. C. (Citation2011). Children’s Testimony: A Handbook of Psychological Research and Forensic Practise. Hoboken, United States John Wiley and Sons Ltd.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Guy C. M. Skinner
Guy C. M. Skinner, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
This research was made possible by a Medical Humanities New Investigator Award from the Wellcome Trust (Grant WT103343MA). This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/>, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.