TY - JOUR
T1 - Child sexual abuse and social identity loss
T2 - A qualitative analysis of survivors' public accounts
AU - Muldoon, Orla T.
AU - Nightingale, Alastair
AU - McMahon, Grace
AU - Griffin, Siobhan
AU - Bradshaw, Daragh
AU - Lowe, Robert D.
AU - McLaughlin, Katrina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. British Journal of Social Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - Emerging evidence suggests that social identities are an important determinant of adaptation following traumatic life experiences. In this paper, we analyse accounts of people who experienced child sexual abuse. Using publicly available talk of people who waived their right to anonymity following successful conviction of perpetrators, we conducted a thematic analysis focusing on trauma-related changes in their social identities. Analysis of these accounts highlighted two themes. The first highlights the acquisition in these accounts of unwanted and damaging identity labels. The second presents child sexual abuse as a key destructive force in terms of important identity work during childhood. Discussion of this analysis centres on the pathological consequences of social identity change. Both the loss of valued identities and the acquisition of aberrant and isolating identities are experienced and constructed as devastating by those affected by child sexual abuse. This has important implications, not only for those impacted by child sexual abuse but for how abuse is discussed in society, and how it is approached by policy makers, educators and individuals working with survivors and their families.
AB - Emerging evidence suggests that social identities are an important determinant of adaptation following traumatic life experiences. In this paper, we analyse accounts of people who experienced child sexual abuse. Using publicly available talk of people who waived their right to anonymity following successful conviction of perpetrators, we conducted a thematic analysis focusing on trauma-related changes in their social identities. Analysis of these accounts highlighted two themes. The first highlights the acquisition in these accounts of unwanted and damaging identity labels. The second presents child sexual abuse as a key destructive force in terms of important identity work during childhood. Discussion of this analysis centres on the pathological consequences of social identity change. Both the loss of valued identities and the acquisition of aberrant and isolating identities are experienced and constructed as devastating by those affected by child sexual abuse. This has important implications, not only for those impacted by child sexual abuse but for how abuse is discussed in society, and how it is approached by policy makers, educators and individuals working with survivors and their families.
KW - SIMTIC
KW - childhood sexual abuse
KW - psychological trauma
KW - social identity
KW - social identity loss
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85191002523&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/bjso.12752
DO - 10.1111/bjso.12752
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85191002523
SN - 0144-6665
VL - 63
SP - 1757
EP - 1770
JO - British Journal of Social Psychology
JF - British Journal of Social Psychology
IS - 4
ER -