The Witch-Hunt Narrative: Politics, Psychology, and the Sexual Abuse of Children 1st Edition
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Ross E. Cheit
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Ross E. Cheit
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ISBN-13:
978-0199931224
ISBN-10:
0199931224
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"But what if the skeptics went too far? What if some of the children were really abused? And what if the legacy of these cases is a disturbing tendency to disbelieve children who say they are being molested? Those are the questions that frame this new book by Ross E. Cheit, a political scientist at
Brown University who spent nearly 15 years on research, poring over old trial transcripts and interview tapes." --New York Times
"The most important book on its subject in the last thirty years. Most legal efforts to address multiple sexual abuse of children have been strangled at birth since the collapse of the McMartin daycare trial and the assaults on child credibility that followed. Ross Cheit's exacting, calm, close
inquiry into the early trials and the media firestorm around them uncovers both grounds for believing the children and the often despicable tactics of the deniers... Cheit shows that the real hysteria lies in the denial of the abuse. If evidence and logic matter, this book will change how
allegations of sexual violation of children by adults -- ground zero of sexual abuse and arguably of gender inequality -- are socially understood and legally addressed." --Catharine A. MacKinnon, University of Michigan Law School and Harvard Law School
"Ross Cheit has done masterful job of finding the facts buried in the mythology of what happened in the high profile sexual abuse cases of the 1980's and brings a degree of balance to our understanding of these sentinel events." --Charles Wilson, MSSW Senior Director and Sam and Rose Stein Endowed
Chair in Child Protection, Chadwick Center for Children & Families, Rady Children's Hospital - San Diego
"Ross Cheit has written a book that must be read by anyone seeking to go beyond the headlines of the multiple victim child abuse cases of the 1980's and 90's and the witch-hunt narrative that grew up around them. Through methodical research into the transcripts of the trials that apparently was
never done by the purveyors of that theory, Cheit sheds light on details of the McMartin, Kelly Michaels and Frank Fuster cases that were ignored when they didn't fit the narrative... The book is not easy, but is required reading for all who seek to understand the dynamics of child abuse cases and
the hysteria that can arise and lead to misinformation, skewed journalism and injustice for children who have been abused and for adults falsely accused of child abuse." --Judge Judith C. Chirlin, Los Angeles Superior Court (Retired)
"[Cheit] recounts evidence with scholarly precision that is emotionally engaging and eminently readable... [his] book is a tour de force against the witch-hunt fabulists and those suggestible enough to believe them." --The Providence Journal
"As Gloria Steinem has said multiple times, we can try to save people from drowning one at a time, or go to the top of the river where they are falling in, and prevent these mishaps from happening at all. Cheit is at the top of the river. Now, psychologists need to come together and get there too."
--PsycCRITIQUES
"Professor Cheit's thorough and informative tome certainly does its part to combat the overreaction and misdirection that it so carefully documents and criticizes." --Harvard Law Review
About the Author
Ross E. Cheit is Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at Brown University.
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Product details
- Publisher : Oxford University Press; 1st edition (April 28, 2014)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 544 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0199931224
- ISBN-13 : 978-0199931224
- Item Weight : 1.84 pounds
- Dimensions : 9.4 x 1.8 x 6.5 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#2,560,507 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,318 in Criminology (Books)
- #4,218 in Violence in Society (Books)
- #5,331 in Public Policy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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32 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2019
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Ross Cheit writes a remarkable, well-researched history of the most prominent child sex abuse cases beginning with the McMartin Day care case and moving forward. He and his many research assistants traveled far and wide to read original court transcripts and watch videos and listen to audio tapes when available. I'm a professional in the field and do workshops on the impact of trauma on memory and am truly amazed at all I have learned as I read through this fascinating book. Ross is a professor and a terrific writer. His research makes it clear these cases began with legitimate evidence of sexual abuse. However, the investigations and prosecution of these cases were hampered by the lack of protocols by the professionals involved. Despite the fact that children had been murdered, raped and sexually abused since the beginning of time and historical figures like Freud knew about it, there was a conspiracy of silence to protect the perpetrators and sacrifice the child victims. The world "woke up" in the early 1980's to the fact children were being abused. (Wow, it only took thousands of years!) Still in the "woke" state, Ross correctly reminds us that people are shocked but turn their head and allow the perpetrators of abuse continue (see Jeffrey Epstein). And institutions don't really care about victims of abuse (see Penn State, University of Michigan, & the Catholic Church. Thanks Ross, you are amazing and I am really grateful you have published this awesome, ground breaking book.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2018
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This is one of the most impressive books I've ever read. The level of detail and research is astounding and deserves the highest possible praise. The writing is straightforward and direct, with a minimum of jargon. The author is trying to communicate, not impress. Given the density of detail and the disturbing content, I found this to be an emotionally difficult book to read. I eventually read it cover to cover, but in spurts over a few months.
Cheit demonstrates beyond any doubt that the "witch hunt narrative" was false -- there was no widespread series of false accusations of sexual abuse during the 1980s and '90s. It simply didn't happen. Furthermore, Cheit's research casts new light on many of the highest profile abuse cases of the same era. Take the McMartin Preschool abuse case, for example. Though the protracted legal case ultimately resulted in not guilty verdicts, Cheit makes a persuasive argument that there were almost certainly actual incidents of child abuse that started the investigation. The investigation was botched and politicized and subject to sensationalist press coverage that complicated things. But at its core, there was very strong evidence of child abuse. Evidence that would still be taken seriously by modern-day police and courts.
The scourge of child abuse is still with us, all too sadly. And Cheit shows the importance of getting the facts straight. As a sidenote, he maintains "The Recovered Memory Project" on Brown University's website. It's an archive of cases where recovered memories of abuse have been validated or confirmed one way or another. The "recovered memory myth" is another falsehood that's widely believed -- the idea that there was an epidemic of "false memories" induced by overzealous or agenda-driven therapists. Didn't happen. See "Crisis or Creation: A Systematic Examination of 'False Memory Syndrome'" by Stephanie Dallam, Journal of Child Sexual Abuse,9 (3/4), 9-36. (available online free)
Cheit demonstrates beyond any doubt that the "witch hunt narrative" was false -- there was no widespread series of false accusations of sexual abuse during the 1980s and '90s. It simply didn't happen. Furthermore, Cheit's research casts new light on many of the highest profile abuse cases of the same era. Take the McMartin Preschool abuse case, for example. Though the protracted legal case ultimately resulted in not guilty verdicts, Cheit makes a persuasive argument that there were almost certainly actual incidents of child abuse that started the investigation. The investigation was botched and politicized and subject to sensationalist press coverage that complicated things. But at its core, there was very strong evidence of child abuse. Evidence that would still be taken seriously by modern-day police and courts.
The scourge of child abuse is still with us, all too sadly. And Cheit shows the importance of getting the facts straight. As a sidenote, he maintains "The Recovered Memory Project" on Brown University's website. It's an archive of cases where recovered memories of abuse have been validated or confirmed one way or another. The "recovered memory myth" is another falsehood that's widely believed -- the idea that there was an epidemic of "false memories" induced by overzealous or agenda-driven therapists. Didn't happen. See "Crisis or Creation: A Systematic Examination of 'False Memory Syndrome'" by Stephanie Dallam, Journal of Child Sexual Abuse,9 (3/4), 9-36. (available online free)
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2020
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Professor Cheit's excellent volume on the backlash resulting from the post-Satanic Panic era is a must-read on the subject of the child abuse epidemic of the 80s and 90s and the aftermath of the PR campaign (led in part by the False Memory Syndome Foundation's pseudo-science). The book doesn't pick sides and points out issues with the defense and therapists who examined some of the kids but also points out several quite salient and pertinent details that are glaringly accurate in some of the supposedly "authoritative" tomes on this topic such as Debbie Nathan's Satan's Silence.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2019
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Great book! Great research! Students in many disciplines should study this excellent book!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2018
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Required reading for anyone who still believes in the "moral panic" and "false memory" propaganda campaigns launched in the 1990's in response to ever growing exposure of familial abuse and child trafficking. Perpetrators will do anything to protect themselves and their profits.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2016
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Important book!
Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2017
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Such an important work.
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2017
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Very interesting and important book that everyone should read to learn about what can happen when a community panics and starts to get paranoid about something. Then you don't know what is real and what the authorities "put" in someone's head.
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