%0 Journal Article
%@ 2193-7680
%A Cockbain, E
%A Wortley, R
%D 2015
%F discovery:1474015
%J Crime Science
%K Routine activity, Rational choice, Opportunity, Trafficking, Sex, Abuse, Exploitation, Child, Offender, Victim
%N 35
%T Everyday atrocities: does internal (domestic) sex trafficking of British children satisfy the expectations of opportunity theories of crime?
%U https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1474015/
%V 4
%X In this study we examine the internal (domestic) sex trafficking of British children using unique data from six major  police investigations. This particular type of internal sex trafficking (sometimes known as ‘street grooming’) has been  popularly conceptualised as a highly sophisticated, skilled and well-organised phenomenon. This study shows that  this characterisation does not withstand empirical scrutiny. Instead, the routine activities and everyday associations of  both offenders and victims are shown to play key roles in facilitating, sustaining and spreading the abuse. While the  criminal acts associated with internal child sex trafficking can be atrocious, the people, places and processes involved  are shown to be far from exceptional. In this respect, the results may be unsettling: they undermine explanations  of an emotive crime that rest on reassuring but ultimately naïve errors of attribution. We argue that it is important,  however, that preventative strategies are underpinned not by sensationalised narrative and untested assumptions but  by sober and robust assessments of appropriate empirical data. The paper contributes to the theoretical and empirical  literature on opportunity theories of crime, on human trafficking and on child sexual abuse/exploitation. While the  sample size is not especially large (55 offenders and 43 victims), this study helps to expand a sorely limited knowledge  base on a topical threat. It is also distinguished by its hard-to-access data and novel analytical approach. The work is  likely to interest a broad and international audience of academics, practitioners and policy makers concerned with  crime prevention and child protection.
%Z © 2015 Cockbain and Wortley. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International  License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any  medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons  license, and indicate if changes were made.