Sex Offender Treatment is Not Punishment
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-2010
Abstract
The treatment of sexual offenders can be fraught with ethical dilemmas. Practitioners must balance the therapeutic needs of sex offender clients alongside the risks they might pose to others. These ethical challenges include balancing community safety with the rights of the offender, the privileged therapeutic relationship and the potential for coerced treatment. In this paper, we respond to Glaser's argument that treatment is punishment and that sex offender treatment providers breach ethical codes by violating confidentiality, engaging in coercion, and ultimately causing harm to clients. We first consider whether sex offender treatment is indeed punishment. We argue that it is not, and that mandated treatment can and should be conducted in a fashion consistent with professional codes of ethics familiar to mental health providers. We then discuss the human rights model, which we agree is an essential lens through which to view the psychological treatment of sexual offenders. We attempt, as have other scholars, to illustrate the ways in which human rights principles intersect with traditional mental health codes of ethics particularly in the case of sex offender treatment. We conclude that sex offender treatment can be conducted ethically, that treatment differs from punishment in clear and distinct ways, and that ethical treatment conforms to a human rights perspective.
Publication
Journal of Sexual Aggression
Publisher
Routledge
Volume
16
Issue
3
Pages
275-285
Department
College of Arts and Sciences
Peer Reviewed
1
Publication History
Published online: 25 May 2010
Recommended Citation
Prescott, D. S., & Levenson, J. S. (2010). Sex offender treatment is not punishment. Journal of Sexual Aggression, 16(3), 275-285. https://doi.org/10.1080/13552600.2010.483819