Child sexual abuse in Ghana: A multi-methods exploratory study
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Children & Society
Abstract
Using a qualitative multi-methods approach, this study
explored the offence, survivor and perpetrator characteristics, and the lived experiences of child and adolescent survivors of child sexual abuse (CSA) in Ghana.
We analysed the contents of local media reports of CSA
cases from January 2015 to December 2020 in Ghana,
after which we conducted semi-structured interviews
involving five female child and adolescent survivors of
CSA. The media content analysis identified 529 eligible
reports involving female (n = 516) and male (n = 13) survivors aged 11–18 who knew the perpetrators. The
perpetrators were all-male youth and middle-aged adults
employed in low-income status occupations. Defilement
was the most reported sexual offence; the survivors were
more likely to come from single-parent families experiencing poverty and economic hardship. The perpetrators
employed multiple methods to coerce and elicit compliance from their victims: confidence approaches, violence (blitz methods) and gifts. content analysis showed
that most of the survivors attributed their victimisation
to family poverty and dysfunctional parent-child relationships. These findings underscore the need to develop
prevention strategies that empower young women and
males to identify, escape or avoid (potential) sexual predators and encourage reporting and disclosure of CSA victimization to formal support institutions.
Description
Research Article
