
The Moral Panic That Created The Independent Safeguarding Authority
PAEDO! It’s the tabloids’ favourite scare story. So good news then that the Government is introducing a database for every adult who comes into regular contact with children, the mentally ill and the aged, checking for criminal convictions, disciplinary action and responses to anonymous tip-offs but the “Paedo!” at No.23.
The vulnerable are being protected.
Former News of the World editor Rebekah Wade once spoke of her paper’s campaign against paedos: “There are 110,000 sex offenders in Britain – one for every square mile”. But not necessarily evenly spaced out.
“The fact is, that if you have paedophiles in society that aren’t monitored they will strike again,” she said.
A NoTW headline read “Police want you to help trap these paedophiles” and the newspaper published photographs of seven wanted child abusers with backing from the police to “name and shame” them.
Light the torches - we march at dusk:
Ms Eithne Wallis The first national director of the Probation Servicesaid the newspaper risked driving paedophiles out of the sight of probation staff. “I would certainly ask them to think again about the wisdom of what they are actually doing.”
This new drive is about saving the kids from paedos. Panic over! Childhood innocence (Jamie Bulger) can be protected from adult evil (Mother Teresa). Tabloids Rejoice! The new Independent Safeguarding Authority (ISA) will route the paedos!
So here’s the Chicken Little of scare stories the Daily Mail to tell us:
Now Big Brother targets helpful parents as one in four Britons are to be vetted for giant child protection database
That doesn’t sound all that encouraging. Doesn’t the Mail want to stop peados? The ISA is set up as a result of the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act of 2006, which was triggered by Sir Michael Bichard’s 2004 report into Ian Huntley’s murder of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman in Soham. Those murders by the school caretaker, a known pervert, must never happen again. Never.
Says Iain Dale, the Tory blogger:
I can accept that people who work in schools should be CRB checked, but this scheme goes too far. The whole thing is a dramatic overreaction to the Ian Huntley case. Huntley was a one off.
A one off? So no need to overreact, to respond to paedos as Maggie Thatcher once wanted to respond to young male hooligans by putting all football fans on a register. Cue Michael White to say that Soham was not a one off:
In California these past few weeks we’ve been hearing about Phil Garrido, the man whose child kidnapping scam lasted 18 years. The neighbours called him “Creepy Phil” and he had form, too. But no one did anything about it and Jaycee Dugard lived on in the garden.
With the ISA you can call someone creepy over a phone line and know that they will be eyed with great suspicion. Here’s how it works:
Under the new system, an individual who wishes to work with children or vulnerable adults will need to apply for a check (separate applications will be needed for children and for adults, as there will be separate barring lists). The application will require proof of identity and a fee.
Well, it’s going to cost:
The government’s controversial vetting database, the Vetting and Barring Scheme (VBS), will cost up to £170m, The Independent has reported.
Organisations such as the Cubs or Scouts would themselves face fines of £10,000 if they use volunteers who have not been cleared.
What does it all add up to? James Slack – nominative determinism, folks – asks Mail readers:
Will the world’s biggest vetting system make us feel safer? Or just more watched?
Er…
Covering 11.3million people, it will mean one in every four adults living in England and Wales will have been checked by Independent Safeguarding Agency st
Incidentally, the woman from One In Four, the sexual abuse charity, says one in four children have been sexually absued. One in four seems a popular statistic.
“One in four Californians could be affected by swine flu, state health chief says”
Says James Slack:
This morning, interviewed by the BBC, Child protection minister Baroness Morgan wriggled and squirmed when asked to confirm one of these facts - namely that parents who volunteer to transport children to and from social groups once a month or more will be subjected to the same checking procedures as a teacher or GP.
Perhaps she didn’t like the way it sounded on air: draconian and grossly disproportionate.
Parent driving children is the big story – the devil is in the detail.
The BBC’s Mark Easton puts the case:
The government’s Vetting and Barring Scheme is a child of moral panic. It is a textbook case of how media hype, political expediency and bureaucratic process lead to conclusions that can later appear disproportionate.
What say the experts - you know the ones who write the news stories and feed the panic..?
Posted: 11th, September 2009 | In: Gallery, Key Posts, Media, Scare Stories Comments (6) | Follow the Comments on our RSS feed: RSS 2.0 | TrackBack | Permalink
Comments





September 14th, 2009 at 2:09 pm
C&C and Trismegistus - I share your anger and disbelief at many of the ridiculous so-called preventative measures sliding out of the woodwork these days - it’s been years since you could take your kids to see Father Christmas, let them sit on his knee and see the sheer wonder in their eyes when they did so - now you can’t take them closer than a couple of feet away from him.
what does that say about our society? obviously we have to protect the kids from the real threat, but since when does that involve suspecting everybody of being guilty until proved innocent…?
September 14th, 2009 at 1:07 pm
I think the panic started when Jamie Bulger was missing, strange then it was two young boys and not the expected paedo/perv. But for a long time afterwards mothers would not let go of their children when out, and they stopped playing unsupervised in parks and playgrounds too, for all the wrong reasons.
When children are stolen to be harmed , it is a rare event, which is why the Media latches onto it.
But most cases of child abduction are by the separated parent refused or denied access.
Children do wander off, they are children and curiosity is in their nature, a sense of fear isn’t developed.
But fear in some adults does need addressing as it is getting out of hand, and mistrust of everyone could have serious repercussions for future adults
September 14th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
…it’s called acute paranoia….
September 14th, 2009 at 12:45 pm
I fear that there is something weird lurking inside Britains culture / psyche… I remember many years ago when britain was first in the clutches of paedo panic there was an interesting experiment carried out by some journo where they showed a picture of a footballer (or someone, can’t remember) with a couple of children sat on his knee. They then showed this picture along with other unrelated pictures to hundreds of people in various European countries. It was only the British (and perhaps the Germans/Austrians) who thought the footballer picture was dodgy. Read into that what you will but to me it implies that something in our attitudes towards adult-child relationships in the UK has gone wrong.
I don’t really want to get started on my opinion regarding the ISA. I’ll just say that it seems like a really stupid and scary approach to dealing with the issue and it has the potential to cause a great deal of damage to the small fragments of anything resembling a “community” left in the UK.
September 11th, 2009 at 11:07 pm
All this drama, and yet you still don’t need any vetting to become a parent and (by definition) in charge of a vulnerable person…
Breed with abandon, do what you like with the fruits of your loins - but help someone else’s kids by giving them a lift to football training and you’re guilty until proven innocent!
The whole world is going to hell in a handcart, and has been since the agricultural revolution!
September 11th, 2009 at 6:01 pm
another piece of ill thought out legislation that will do more harm than good in the long run and create a false sense of security for parents. They will assume that their children are safe because he’she’s been checked!
It only needs to be done once. Pffft. so long as you’ve not been caught or you hang onto your urges till after the check you’ll be okay?
Authors (male and female) giving talks in schools? what do they think will happen? ‘come and sit on my lap little girl while I read you a story’? And the accompanying teachers won’t notice? If you refuse to be checked and therefore not do talks to kids does that infer guilt?
Rant over for the moment
Oh it makes me so mad…..