Child Sexual Abuse
(noun)
A form of child abuse in which an adult or older adolescent abuses a child for sexual stimulation.
Examples of Child Sexual Abuse in the following topics:
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Child Abuse
- Child abuse is the physical, sexual or emotional mistreatment, or neglect of a child.
- Child abuse is the physical, sexual, or emotional mistreatment or neglect of a child or children.
- There are four major categories of child abuse: neglect, physical abuse, psychological/emotional abuse, and sexual abuse.
- Child sexual abuse is a form of child abuse in which an adult or older adolescent abuses a child for sexual stimulation.
- Child abuse is the physical, sexual or emotional mistreatment, or neglect of a child.
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Family Violence
- Coercing a person to engage in sexual activity against his or her will, even if that person is a spouse or intimate partner with whom consensual sex has occurred, is an act of aggression and violence.
- Coercing a person to engage in sexual activity against their will, even if that person is a spouse or intimate partner with whom consensual sex has occurred, is an act of aggression and violence.
- Sexual abuse is any situation in which force or threat is used to obtain participation in unwanted sexual activity.
- Because of the awareness of domestic violence that some children have to face, it also generally impacts how the child develops emotionally, socially, behaviorally as well as cognitively.
- Some emotional and behavioral problems that can result due to domestic violence include increased aggressiveness, anxiety, and changes in how a child socializes with friends, family, and authorities.
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Elder Abuse
- The main types of elder abuse include physical abuse, emotional abuse, financial abuse, sexual abuse, and neglect.
- Sexual abuse for elders is when an elder is forced to take part in any sexual activity, including participating in conversations of an unwanted sexual nature.
- Elders with dementia may not be able to consent to any sexual activity whatsoever.
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The Older Years
- Abuse of the elderly is a serious problem in the U.S.
- Abuse refers to psychological/emotional abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, and caregiver neglect or financial exploitation, while self-neglect refers to behaviors that threaten the person's own health and safety.
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Sexual Violence
- Sexual violence is any sexual act or sexual advance directed at one individual without their consent.
- Sexual violence is any sexual act or sexual advance directed at one individual without their consent.
- Forms of sexual violence include: rape by strangers, marital rape, date rape, war rape, unwanted sexual harassment, demanding sexual favors, sexual abuse of children, sexual abuse of disabled individuals, forced marriage, child marriage, denial of the right to use contraception, denial of the right to take measures to protect against sexually-transmitted diseases, forced abortion, genital mutilation, forced circumcision, and forced prostitution.
- On a global scale, international sexual violence is difficult to track because of extreme variation in sexual mores.
- Sexual violence is severly under reported.
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Sexual Orientation
- The sexual orientation of your audience members should be taken into account when giving a speech.
- "Gay" is generally used to describe a sexual orientation, while "MSM" describes a behavior.
- The term is especially used in the context of human sexual attraction to denote romantic or sexual feelings toward men and women.
- It also holds that heterosexuality is the normal sexual orientation, and that sexual and marital relations are most (or only) fitting between a man and a woman.
- One can also use the term "partners" rather than the more hetreonormative "husband" or "wife. " And remember that families come in all different kinds of formations, not just biological male and female birth parents with their child.
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Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)
- A sexually transmitted infection is passed between people during unprotected sexual intercourse with an infected partner.
- Sexually transmitted infections (STI), also referred to as sexually transmitted diseases (STD) and venereal diseases (VD), are illnesses that have a significant probability of transmission between humans by means of human sexual behavior, including vaginal intercourse, oral sex, and anal sex.
- As may be noted from the name, sexually transmitted infections are transmitted from one person to another by certain sexual activities, rather than being actually caused by those sexual activities.
- It is not possible to catch any STI from a sexual activity with a person who is not carrying a disease; conversely, a person who has an STI contracted it from contact (sexual or otherwise) with someone who had it, or his/her bodily fluids.
- Some STIs such as HIV can be transmitted from mother to child either during pregnancy or breastfeeding.
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Biology of Sexual Behavior
- The biology of human sexuality includes the reproductive system and the sexual response cycle, as well as the factors that affect them.
- The semen and sperm, as a result of sexual intercourse, can fertilize an ovum in the female's body; the fertilized ovum (zygote) develops into a fetus, which is later born as a child.
- Sexual motivation, often referred to as libido, is a person's overall sexual drive or desire for sexual activity.
- The sexual response cycle is a model that describes the physiological responses that take place during sexual activity.
- It controls nerves and muscles used during sexual behavior.
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Treatment of Slaves in the United States
- Slave women in the United States were frequently subjected to rape and sexual abuse.
- Many slaves fought back against sexual attacks, and many died resisting.
- Sexual abuse of slave women was rooted in and protected by the patriarchal Southern culture of the era in which all women, black or white, were treated as property, or chattel.
- As early as the adoption of partus sequitur ventrem into Virginia law in 1662, the children born of sexual relations between any man and a black woman were classified as slaves regardless of the father's race or status.
- At the same time, Southern societies strongly prohibited sexual relations between white women and black men in the name of racial purity.
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Defining Sex, Gender, and Sexuality
- In humans, the biological sex of a child is determined at birth based on several factors, including chromosomes, gonads, hormones, internal reproductive anatomy, and genitalia.
- "Human sexuality" refers to people's sexual interest in and attraction to others, as well as their capacity to have erotic experiences and responses.
- People's sexual orientation is their emotional and sexual attraction to particular sexes or genders, which often shapes their sexuality.
- Social aspects deal with the effects of human society on one's sexuality, while spirituality concerns an individual's spiritual connection with others through sexuality.
- The standard model of the difference between sex and gender says that one's sex is biologically determined (meaning that when a child is born, doctors classify the child as a particular sex depending on anatomy), while one's gender is socially or culturally determined (meaning that the way in which that child is raised, socialized, and taught determines whether they take on masculine or feminine traits).