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American Youth and the Internet. EU Kids Online: European Research on Cultural, Contextual & Risk Issues regarding Children and the Internet June 11, 2009 London School of Economics and Political Science, London. David Finkelhor, Ph.D . Janis Wolak, JD University of New Hampshire
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American Youth and the Internet EU Kids Online: European Research on Cultural, Contextual & Risk Issues regarding Children and the Internet June 11, 2009 London School of Economics and Political Science, London David Finkelhor, Ph.D. Janis Wolak, JDUniversity of New Hampshire Crimes against Children Research Center
Not the Same: The Internet has risks The Internet promotes risks
The Internet as risk amplifier Makes youth more vulnerable to predators Promotes risky sexual behavior Encourages suicide/anorexia Threatens academic & physical development Promotes bullying, crime & extremism
Juvenile Sexual Victimization Trends, 1993 - 2005 52% Decline Victimizations: *Note: Known offenders are family members or acquaintances; unknown offenders are strangers or unidentified. Source: National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), each year, for number of incidents; Crimes Against Children Research Center (CCRC) calculations for rates.
Sexual Abuse Substantiations 1990-2006*:Extrapolated to U. S. Child Population 53% Decline Rate per 10,000 Children (<18) *Source: NCANDS
Teenage Birth Rates, 1991-2005 Rate per 1,000 Females (15-17 yrs old) Source: National Vital Statistics Reports: Sept. 25, 2001, Vol. 49 (10); June 6, 2002, Vol. 50 (10); Dec.17, 2003,Vol. 52 (10); Nov.23, 2004 Vol.53(9).
Grades 9 - 12: Sexual intercourse with 4 or more people, 1991-2005 30% decline1991-2005 Source: Youth Risk Behavior Survey
9th Graders: Ever had sexual intercourse,1991-2007 -16%1991-2007 *Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Grades 9 -12: Intercourse, past 3 months, 1991-2007 -6%1991-2007 *Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Girls: 1st sexual experience age 15 or younger with someone 3+ years older, 1995-2002 -10%1995-2002 *Source: Child Trends’ analyses of the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth
Grades 9 – 12: Condom use by sexually active students, 1991-2007 +35%1991-2007 *Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Teen suicide, 1990-2003 Rate per 100,000 Teens (15-17 yrs) Source: Center for Disease Control: WISQARS (fatal suicides, all types)
Grades 9-12: Thought seriously about attempting suicide, 1991-2005 *Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention
12th Graders: Felt sad or hopeless,1999-2005 *Source: Center for Disease Control and Prevention
8th Grade: National mathematics scores , 1990-2007 *Source: U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences
K-8th Grade: After-school sports at least once a week, 2001-2005 +10%2002-2005 *Source: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics
8th Graders: 4+ hours of television daily, 1991-2006 -21%1991-2006 *Source: Monitoring the Future data, 1991-2006
Ages 12-18: Criminal victimization at school, past 6 months, 1995 - 2005 Total Percent 60% decline1995-2005 Source: Dinkes, R., Forrest Cataldi, E., Kena, G., & Baum, K. (2006). Indicators of school crime and safety: 2006 (NCES 2007-003/NCJ214262). Washington, DC: US Departments of Education and Justice.
Ages 12-18: Targets of hate words at school, past 6 months, 1999-2005 -15%1999-2005 *Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, School Crime Supplement (SCS) to the national Crime Victimization Survey, 1999-2005
Grades 9-12: Physical fight in the past year, 1991-2007 -16%1991-2007 *Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
8th Graders: Marijuana use, past 30 days, 1996-2006 -42%1996-2006 *Source: Monitoring the Future data
Could the Internet be protective? Reducing boredom and alienation Changing patterns of risky offline exploration Increasing detection of risky behavior and conduct problems
Other explanations for improvements Economic prosperity More effective social problem intervention Psychiatric medications
Study Internet risk in context of all risk • Examine totality of harms • E.g., online bullying as an aspect of bullying • Test whether activity patterns contribute to overall risk and risks in specific contexts • For both online and offline activities
Common definitions of risk and harm in online and offline contexts Online and offline bullying Online and offline sexual solicitation Online and offline sexual crimes
Measure and differentiate the very serious portion of the risk spectrum Not just casual sexual solicitation Not just any mean language Not just any exposure to pornography
Measure whether “risks” result in real harms Use accepted measures of harm Capture populations most likely to experience harm Reconsider use of “risk” unless involves criminality or empirical associations with harm
Enjoy… The vibrancy of the youth online culture The opportunity to contribute to discoveries about childhood and the modern world The pleasures of good colleagues
Crimes against Children Research Center University of New Hampshire david.finkelhor@unh.edu janis.wolak@unh.edu www.unh.edu/ccrc