Affiliation:
1. School of Education University of KwaZulu‐Natal Pinetown South Africa
2. Department of Sociology University of the Western Cape Cape Town South Africa
Abstract
AbstractThis paper explores two orphaned girls' accounts of victimization and vulnerability to child sexual abuse in their family homes. Interviews with these girls revealed a trend of neglect, adversity and processes of adultification which involved accounts of sexual abuse within their family homes. According to the data, the participants are vulnerable and they experience victimization as they are routinely sexually abused by older male relatives and non‐related men and boys inside their family homes – where they are supposed to feel safe and protected. We argue that these two young girls' experiences need to be understood as consequences of the prevailing cultures of toxic heteropatriarchal masculinities which have produced and normalized the distribution of male power over girls. The kinds of interventions required to address toxic masculinities and to insulate orphan girls from sexual abuse and neglect are also discussed.
Funder
National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences
International Development Research Centre
Subject
Life-span and Life-course Studies,Education,Health (social science)
Cited by
5 articles.
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