The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1
The EconomistJuly 21 st 2018 45

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N JAPAN it is hard to avoid the disturbing
spectacle of young girls being treated as
sex objects. Rorikon an abbreviation of
“Lolita complex” is ubiquitous. In M’s Pop
Life a sex shop in Tokyo’s Akihabara dis-
trict known for its pop subculture life-size
models of girls their breasts at various
stages of puberty are openly on sale. Else-
where big-bosomed cartoon girls are
splashed across posters; children (or
grown-ups made to look like children)
pose in magazines in bikinis.
Rorikon is a peculiarly Japanese phe-
nomenon. But across the world there are
growing concerns about children being
portrayed sexually and the effects on the
children themselves. This comes in two
forms. The first “direct” sexualisation in-
cludes advertising television programmes
and magazine content that portray chil-
dren especially girls as sexually aware or
active. It also includes goods aimed at chil-
dren who are seen as tryingto make them-
selves “sexier”—such as padded bras or
hot-pants make-up or pole-dancing toys.
The second is “indirect”—the worry that
thanks to the internet children witness
ever more depictions of sexual activity.
They are likely to see far more pornogra-
phy than earlier generations and at a
younger age. In Britain for instance
around half of 11 - to 16 - year-olds have seen

Across Britain the police received almost
30 000 reports of sexual assaults by chil-
dren on other children over the past four
years including 2 625 allegedly on school
grounds. And “sexting”—sending explicit
images—is widespread. It can ruin young
lives. A boy who opens a forwarded sext
might find himself on a sex-offenders’ reg-
ister. A girl whose intimate photo ends up
widely shared online may be driven to de-
spair oreven suicide.
But it is not known whether all this is
really linked to the sexual content children
are exposed to. Theiryouth precludes most
research. And Deevia Bhana a South Afri-
can academic says that some of the con-
cern stems from moral attitudes about the
way children—almost always girls—should
act rather than from actual evidence of
harm. In fact in some ways risky behav-
iour is decreasing. Surveys show that in
much of the rich world young people are
waiting longer to lose their virginity. Teen-
age pregnancies are falling.
Precocious sexualisation however is
recognised ascausingsome formsofharm.
One is to mental health. Sharon Lamb a
child psychologist and professor at the
University of Massachusetts Boston says
she sees children mainly girls losing self-
esteem when they feel that the only way
they are valued is if they act sexually. This
feeds into problems such as eating disor-
ders and can affect future relationships.
Boys suffer too. Ms Lamb says stereotypes
portrayingthem as alwayswantingsex put
them underpressure to actin a certain way.
Asecond possible type ofharm is thata
sexualised pornographic culture may give
children damaging ideas about sex. Ms
Hulme reckons that the increase in chil-
dren inappropriately touching each other

pornography online mostly by accident
according to a 2016 study by the NSPCC a
British children’s charity.
Japan has belatedly been reining in
some excesses. In 2014 it banned the pos-
session of child pornography—although it
is still a hub for making and selling the ille-
gal stuff. Last year the Tokyo metropolitan
government banned under- 18 s from work-
ing in the JK(joshi kosei schoolgirl) indus-
try where men pay for example to go for a
walk with a schoolgirl or to lie down next
to one (or under the new rules a woman
pretendingto be one). This year after a few
customer complaints Aeon a big retail
chain said it would stop stocking porno-
graphicmagazines in some ofitsshops. But
theyremain widelyon sale in convenience
stores. Keiji Goto a police officer turned
children’s-rights lawyer says “Japan re-
mains behind othercountries.”

Don’t growup
Indeed across the rich world countries are
grappling with how to deal with the over-
sexualisation of children. The assump-
tion—often unspoken—is that exposure to
sexualised images is linked to a growing
number of sexual incidents involving chil-
dren. Amanda Hulme the head of a prim-
ary school in north-western England says
it is seeing more peer-on-peer abuse.

The sexualisation of children

Innocents and experience


TOKYO
In manycountries parents and governments are fretting about the premature
sexualisation of children. Butmanyignore the root causes

International

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