LEADing evidence-informed Child Exploitation Material (CEM) Reduction | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

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LEADing evidence-informed Child Exploitation Material (CEM) Reduction

Effective child exploitation material (CEM) reduction requires policy and practice to be evidence informed. This project synthesised the current evidence across a range of disciplines that contribute to CEM reduction. This synthesis ascertained what is most effective (i.e., ‘what works, for whom, in what circumstances, in what respects and how’) as well as ‘what looks promising’.

Our research synthesis revealed that, despite exploring strategies across various disciplines, the reduction of CEM requires a comprehensive and collaborative approach. Interestingly, we found a significant gap in evaluation evidence across these disciplines—most strategies had either not been evaluated or had undergone only limited evaluation. All strategies identified in our synthesis were validated by national experts through roundtable discussions.

Impact

Our findings underscore the need for further research to better understand the effectiveness of CEM reduction strategies. Nevertheless, we were able to draw valuable insights into how and why each strategy might work, and in what contexts.

 

Chief Investigators: Rayment-McHugh, S., Christensen, L., (co-leaders), McKillop, N., Moritz, D., Burton, K., Jones, C., Prenzler, T., Lacey D., & Edwards, G. in partnership with Queensland Police Service

Research Assistants: Duggan, M., & Walker, K.

Funding:Australian Institute of Criminology

Funding year: 2019-2020