The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1

46 International The EconomistJuly 21 st 2018


2 is linked to pornography. No one has ever
proved howpornographyrelatesto action
but children (more boys than girls) have
told pollsters from the NSPCC that it gave
them ideas about what to try. This high-
lights the need for good sex education if
only to inform children about real life.
A third sort would be if such material
encouraged paedophilia. Risa Yasojima of
M’s Pop Life says without citing evidence
that she reckons its products can help pae-
dophiles refrain from touching actual chil-
dren. But others fear that ubiquitous im-
ages of sexualised children and child
pornography foster the paedophile delu-
sion that sees ordinary spontaneous and
tactile children as flirtatious.

Not in front ofthe children
Efforts to tackle these dangers need to ac-
ceptthat in the internetage itmaybe possi-
ble to limit children’s exposure to sexual
images butnotto eliminate it. Better to pre-
pare them to be able to cope and to recog-
nise that the images themselves are a
symptom of a broader problem: how soci-
ety turns women into sexual objects.
In the past decade countries have start-
ed to act on worries about the over-sexual-
isation of children. The turning-point in
Britain was a 2010 report on the issue that
the government commissioned from Reg
Bailey then at Mothers’ Union a British
Christian charity and now a council mem-
ber at the Advertising Standards Authority
the industry’s self-regulatory body.
Published in 2011 his report made 14
recommendations such as keeping explic-
it magazines out of children’s sight. It also
advocated raising parents’ awareness of
sales techniques and developing codes of
practice among retailers covering goods
marketed to children. Since 2011 guidelines
about what can be shown on street bill-
boards and magazine displays have been
tightened. Internet-service providers offer
parental filters to limit what their children
may see. A new law coming into force this
year obliges pornography sites to require
evidence that users are over 18.
Other countries are following suit. In
2014 France outlawed beauty contests for
under- 13 s. La Paz the capital ofBolivia has
moved to do the same. Some Cubans are
fretting about a craze among girls as young
as five for quinceañeras coming-of-age par-
ties intended for 15 - year-old girls in which
the girls often pose for photos dolled up
and looking sultry. Pressure groups and in-
dividual complaints also have an impact.
In 2006 Tesco a British supermarket chain
removed a children’s pole-dancing kit
from the toys section ofits website. In 2010
Primark an Irish clothing company with-
drew children’s bikinis with padded tops.
If driven by online vigilantism alone
however measures to prevent premature
sexualisation may infringe freedom of ex-
pression—or simplygo too far. In May after

a storm of online condemnation Sweaty
Betty a boutique British fitness-wear
brand withdrewfrom itswebsite an image
ofthree girlsaround 15 or 16 clad in tropical-
patterned leggings and crop-tops which
in hindsight looks fairlyinoffensive.
Criticism is almost always directed at
girls not at boys or the culture around
them. Girls are told not to wear short skirts
to school so as not to distract boys or even
teachers—yet not enough is done to teach
boys about consent. “I am a bit sick of the
simplistic ‘sexy-so-soon’ discourse out
there” says Ms Lamb the child psycholo-
gist. “A girl playing at being Beyoncé isn’t
harmful. But a society that only values her
forbeingBeyoncé is a problem.”
Research from places such as South Af-
rica and Sweden suggests children can be
better at dealing with sexualised advertis-
ing than adults realise. Ms Bhana the
South African academic says her research
suggests children are “highly sophisticated
consumers”. But children need help to
navigate the culture they grow up in. Mr
Baileysaystoo little isdone to develop chil-
dren’sresilience to the stuff theyinevitably
stumble across especiallypornography.
If parents and teachers were matter-of-
fact and honest about sex young people
would find it easier to talkabout their wor-
ries and less likely to let what they see
bother them. Research by the NSPCC sug-
gests parents tend not to be too concerned
by some things their children do—wearing
“sexy” clothes or make-up for example—
seeing children as wanting to grow up
quicker than they do. But they do worry
about them seeinghard-core pornography.
Britain’s Department forEducation is in
the process of updating its sex-and-rela-
tionships guidance for the first time since
2000. Martha Kirby of the NSPCCsays this
is long overdue. The government is to hold

consultations on new approaches such as
teaching primary-school children about
the idea of consent and those in second-
ary school about the laws on sexual abuse
and the dangers of online grooming by
paedophiles.
In many places even basic sex educa-
tion is lacking. Ms Bhana sees a danger in
the extreme positions of some lobbies es-
pecially religious ones and countries such
as Saudi Arabia that resist teaching chil-
dren aboutsexatall in the hope of keeping
them “pure”. Religious groups in America
such as the Abstinence Clearinghouse
also argue that sex education encourages
children to have sex. In Myanmar similar
concerns mean schools barely cover the
birds and the bees.
Better to accept that children will natu-
rally want to explore their desires and feel-
ings and equip them to do so safely with
factual information awareness of online
dangers access to contraception—and the
power to know what they want and to say
no to what theydon’t want.

Don’t worry be happy
Countries such as the Netherlands and
Denmark are closer to this healthier ap-
proach. They expect children to be well in-
formed about their bodies and see the
purpose of sex education as not just to
warn of the risks but to help prepare for a
happy sex life. This may be one reason
why according to Anna Sparrman a pro-
fessor ofchild studies at Linkoping Univer-
sity in Sweden Scandinavian countries
have not really seen premature-sexualisa-
tion panics. It is not because of an any-
thing-goes attitude; Sweden for example
bans all broadcast advertising aimed at
children under 12.
Justas important countries need to face
up to the cultural backdrop behind over-
sexualisation says Michelle Jongenelis a
researcher at Australia’s Curtin University.
That images of girls looking sexy are so
much more prevalent than those of boys
reflects sexism and the sexual objectifica-
tion ofwomen; so does the waymuch por-
nographyshows women beingtreated in a
degrading manner. Children assimilate
these norms through the images of their
peers and the products pushed at them—
including at the extreme pornography.
Happily this broader cultural context
does seem to be under scrutiny in some
parts of the world though the process is at
a very early stage. Basic ideas about gen-
der—such as shops labelling baby clothes
as “boys’” and “girls’”—are being chal-
lenged and more nuanced understanding
of the meaning of “consent” are gaining
ground. The #MeToo debate which has
pushed sexual assault to the fore leads Ms
Jongenelis to conclude that there is a shift
in norms about what is acceptable. If so
then children should be among the great-
est beneficiaries. 7
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