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Commentary
Grooming and
Seduction
Park Dietz'
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Abstract
Ken Lanning's recollections of the origins of the use of the term "grooming"
to refer to techniques used by acquaintances to gain sexual access to and
control over children is an important contribution to the history of the
significant recognition that many cases of child sexual abuse occur ac the
hands of offenders who are acquaintances of the child and who do not need
to use force, dream, or violence to gain the compliance of their victims.
That this recognition was slow in coming is obvious in retrospect. as is true
of any social problem that remains hidden for centuries only to burst into
public consciousness over the course of a few years. In this article. I report
the results of searches using Google Scholar to look at the introduction of
this use of the term "grooming" to the peer-reviewed literature in 1984 and
its increasing use through 2016. Since 2008. the usage has been adopted
in hundreds of articles in the professional literature each year. suggesting
that this usage of the term "grooming" will remain common in the decades
ahead. I also examine the history of the term "seduction" in the context of
child sexual abuse. particularly two archaic uses of the term: as a euphemism
for any sexual or sexually stimulating encounter between child and adult and
in the context of suggestions that it was the child who seduced the adult.
To avoid resurrecting any confusion over these issues, it would be a mistake
to abandon "grooming" in favor of "seduction." I conclude that the best
strategy may be that adopted by Lanning of using the terms grooming and
seduction in tandem. explaining the parallels between the seduction of one
adult by another and the grooming or seduction of a child by an adult
'Park Dreg & Associates. Newport Beach. CA. USA
Corresponding Author:
Park Den Park Dreg & Atacama. Newport Beach CA 92663. USA.
Email: expertaparkeeamsoaatts.com
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Keywords
grooming. seduction. child sexual abuse. acquaintance molestation. litigation
Grooming and Seduction
In the development of knowledge of child sexual abuse, few discoveries
could outweigh the importance of recognizing that a large proportion of
offenses arc committed by acquaintances of the child using techniques other
than force or threat of force. No individual has done more to share this insight
with the international law enforcement community than Ken Lanning, whose
writings and teachings have also reached mental health professionals. those
who work in the criminal justice and social service systems. those who cam
for the nation's children, and countless concerned citizens and parents.
The application of the terms "seduction- or -grooming" to these nonforce-
Cul. nonthreatening, and nonviolent techniques has been in the service of dis-
seminating this important insight, which first burst into public consciousness
as a real possibility in the mid-I980s as a result of partially untrue media
reports about the McMartin School caseand thecase of Father Gilbert Caudle,
both of which stories first broke in 1984. Yct even today. far too many people,
including many who should know better, have difficulty grasping the possibil-
ity of nonforceful, nonthreatening, and nonviolent acquaintance molestation,
as their preconceptions of childhood innocence and predatory molesters arc
too strong to allow them to accept that children can be so readily manipulated
into doing or allowing things that others find abhorrent.
Grooming
Lanning (2018) is precisely correct in dating to the 1980s the use of the term
"grooming" to refer to techniques for gaining sexual access to children and in
his observation that during the 1980s, this usage gradually increased. Using
the search capabilities of Google Scholar. I found no use of the word "groom-
ing" to mean such techniques in conjunction with the terms "child sexual
abuse," "child molestation." or "child molester" in the professional literature
from 1850 through 1983. The first publication identified by Google Scholar
as using the tern, "grooming" in this way was an article by Conte (1984) cit-
ing Groth and Birnbaum (1979) for the proposition that "PIM most cases,
except those involving abuse by a stranger, the perpetrator involves children
in sexual abuse through a grooming process in which a combination of kind-
ness, attention, material enticement, special privilege, and coercion arc
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Journal of Interpersonal Violence 33(1)
Figure I. Use of the term "grooming" In assodation with "child sexual abuse" in
the professional literature accessed by Google Scholar. 1984.2016. as of 25 August.
2017.
expertly applied" (p. 558). Groth and Birnbaum accurately describe the pro-
cess (at p. 142-143), but do not use the term "grooming."
Figure I shows how the maximum number of publications in the database
using the term "grooming" for this meaning' has increased since 1984. For
the remainder of the l 980s, zero to nine publications per year used "groom-
ing" for this meaning. From 1990-1999, the annual frequency rose from eight
to 63, and from 2000 to 2009, from 64 to 227. From 2010 to 2016, the annual
frequency rose from 282 to 533.
My own recollection of the growing use of the term "grooming" in this
context during the 1980s and 1990s is that it spread not only through peer-
reviewed literature and books, but also though the teaching and training being
conducted by Ken Lanning, Ann Burgess, and other thought leaders of the em,
and that it was gradually adopted by joumalists and the general public as well.
As the term came to be widely applied, it became increasingly obvious that
offenders who groom children often groom the parents of those children the
organizations through which they work or volunteer with children, and the
communities in which they function. The success of these offenders in doing
so makes it all the more difficult for observers to overcome the false belief that
such a "nice guy" could not be harming children (Lanning & Dietz, 2014).
Lanning (2018) points to some of the ways in which the term "grooming"
has been misapplied (e.g., to refer to the use of "lures" in stranger cases or
what might be expected parental behaviors in intrafamilial cases) but does
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not mention the misuse of the term in civil litigation. Where a victim is suing
an employer or organization in connection with the sexual abuse of a minor
by an employee or volunteer, it has become commonplace for the victim's
advocate to argue that the failure to detect "grooming" was negligent on the
part of the employer or organization. If their use of the term "grooming"
always encompassed excessive focus on a particular child, time alone with
the child, or inappropriate touching, this usage might not be problematic, but
when "grooming" is applied to such common and desirable behaviors as
being kind or attentive or helpful or caring, there is considerable risk of mis-
leading the fact finder into believing that these latter behaviors are well-
established predictors of child sexual abuse when there is no evidence
whatsoever that they can help discriminate between good employees and vol-
unteers, on the one hand, and risky employees and volunteers, on the other
hand. In the litigation context, efforts to expand the concept of "grooming" to
encompass desirable behaviors that an not associated with elevated risk is
misleading. particularly when coupled with the presumption or suggestion
that "grooming" always reflects an intent or plan to offend or, worse. that an
offense can be proved by the fact that the accused engaged in -grooming."
Seduction
Although I agree with Lanning (2018) that the term "seduction" is preferable
to the term "grooming," at least when them is an opportunity to explain how
similar the seduction of a child is to the seduction of an age-appropriate part-
ner, there is ample historical reason to be cautious about the use of the term
"seduction" in this context without further explanation. This is because of
two archaic usages of "seduction" in the older literature.
Archaic Usage #1: Seduction as a Euphemism for the Offense
One of the archaic usages of "seduction." found often in the older scientific
literature, is as a vague euphemism for any occurrence of child sexual abuse
or an event that may have been sexually simulating to the child, as in these
passages:
• "(A) shock of some kind is held responsible for the neurosis—an
attack by an animal, a threat of castration, a seduction, an actual view-
ing of parental coitus ..." (Isaacs, 1928, p. 193).
• ". . . I wondered whether the precocity of these fantasies and their
frequency might not be due to actual seduction that the child had expe-
rienced ..." (Rank, 1942, p. 56).
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• ". . . It was expected that a connection would be found between the
child's symptom and the seduction, which was assumed to be the trau-
matic factor..." (Bornstein. 1946, p. 230).
• ". . . (W)here father or mother, either consciously or unconsciously,
elevate the child into a substitute sexual partner or commit real acts of
seduction with him .. ." (A. Freud, 1968, p. 45).
• "If we assume that the tam 'seduction' refers to any kind of sexual
encounter, it can range from milder types. such as exposing oneself
and enticing the child to follow suit, all the way to forcible rape"
(Finch, 1974, p. 34).
•
"She was then able to use the dolls to reveal the drama of her own
seduction and the ensuing family chaos ..." (Mrazelc, 1980, p. 279).
Here "seduction" is not referring to the process by which a child is
groomed or seduced but to the offensive event itself. Freud's seduction
hypothesis ". . . generalized that the roots of all adult neuroses lay in child-
hood sexual contacts with adults" (Gagnon, 1965, p. 177). The vagueness of
this use of "seduction" makes it impossible to determine which child sexual
abuse behaviors are and am not encompassed by the term and suggests that
"seduction" may mean different specific things to different authors.
Authors sometimes imply that "seduction" does not include violence. as when
they distinguish it from mix or other violent assaults, as in these examples:
•
"Klein has stated that an experience of seduction or rape by a grown-
up person may have serious effects upon the child's psychic develop-
ment ..." (Bender & Blau, 1937, p. 500).
• "Rik possible ... event of seduction, incest, or rape ..." (Lewis &
Sand, 1969, p. 606).
•
"Violence is rarely found to accompany the incestuous act, possibly
because seduction, passive compliance. or sexual curiosity or explora-
tion promote such relationships" (Singer. 1979, p. 8).
•
"Children can be broken much more easily than adults, and the effect
on them of torture, hatred, seduction, and rape—or even of indiffer-
ence, of deprivation of love and care—is the devastating one of devel-
opmental arrest ..." (Shengold, 1979, p. 537).
Although this usage comports with the modern idea of seduction or
grooming insofar as it is to be distinguished from the use of force. threats. or
violence, we would not today distinguish seduction from rape but rather
would view seduction (or grooming) as a means of completing a rape or other
sexual offense with minimal resistance or risk of disclosure.
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Cioffi (1976) interpreted Freud as using the concept of seduction to refer
only to nonviolent sexual assaults, writing ".
he duly reported that he had
discovered the specific cause of psychoneurotic disorder: A pa_ssive sexual expe-
rience before puberty. In other words, a wduction"(p. 275). Cioffi's (1976) quo-
tations of Freud in the same article support this interpretation: "Freud later
assigned to his patients in phrases like: 'hysterics trace back their symptoms to
fictitious traumas'—or patients 'ascribe their symptoms to passive sexual expe-
riences in early childhood— (p. 277). Even here, however, what constitutes a
"passive sexual experience" is unclear, as it could mean the offender did not use
violence, that the child did not resist, or that the child was not an active
participant.
Archaic Usage #2: The Child as Seducer
A second archaic usage of "seduction•" is to refer to the child's tempting of the
offender. This is diametrically opposed to our current thinking about child sexual
abuse in its suggestion that it is the child who is at fault. as in these examples:
• ". . . IA) most striking feature was that these children were distin-
guished as unusually charming and attractive in their outward person-
alities. Thus, it is not remarkable that frequently we considered the
possibility that the child might have been the actual seducer rather
than the one innocently seduced" (Bender & Blau. 1937, p. 514).
•
"The majority of pedophiles arc harmless individuals and their victims
are usually known to be aggressive and seductive children" (Revitch
& Weiss, 1962, p. 78).
• "In many [cases) it was highly probable that the child had used his
charm in the role of seducer rather than that he had been the innocent
one who had been seduced . ..•" (Bender & Grimm, 1952, p. 826).
•
"Abraham (1907) and Bender and Blau (1937) have commented on
how charming and seductive these children can be" (Rosenfeld.
Nadelson. Krieger. & Backman. 1977, p. 332).
Three examples of authors attempting to remedy this archaic view are as
follows:
• "... Although there may be a different quality to a seduction than to an
attack, it must be remembered that even a seductive child cannot have
full adult comprehension of the act she is courting and cannot be
viewed as responsible in this area" (Lipton & Roth, 1969. p 859).
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"Because the affectional needs of the child am not adequately met by the
parents, the child may indiscriminately relate to adults in an affection-seek-
ing manner in an effort to ensure her emotional survival.
Numerous other investigators have characterized this behavior of the child
as 'seductive'. However, our study indicates that this behavior is instead the
child's often desperate attempt to meet her needs for care and attention . . .
The child's behavior may often appear sexualized to an adult ... As a result,
it is mom appropriate to describe this behavior as affection-seeking rather
than seductive" (Johnston, 1979, pp. 948-949).
•
"'Everybody knows' that adults must protect themselves from ground-
less accusations of seductive or vindictive young people. .. . What
everybody does not know, and would not want to know, is that the vast
majority of investigated accusations prove valid and that most of the
young people were less than eight years old at the time of initiation"
(Summit. 1983. p. 178).
Conclusion
Since its introduction to the peer-reviewed professional literature in 1984,
the term "grooming" has become so widely adopted that it will remain in
widespread use for decades to come. We can and should clarify the meaning
of the term wherever possible to avoid misuse or misleading of our audi-
ences. We could benefit from prospective studies of the frequency of groom-
ing-like behaviors among adults in target-rich environments such as schools,
youth sports, and youth groups, which could help distinguish behaviors por-
tending risk from those that do not, though it would require a large sample
and a long time to reveal at least some of the offenders in the sample.
The two archaic uses of the tcnn "seduction" in the context of child sexual
abuse identified here am too recent and too widely known to justify completely
abandoning the term "grooming' in favor of "seduction:' even if it were possible
to do so. Perhaps the best strategy is that adopted by Lanning (2018) of explain-
ing the parallel between the courtship and mating rituals that adults use with one
another and the courtship and mating rituals that some use with children.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research.
authorship. and/or publication of this article.
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Funding
The awhor(s) received no financial support for the ix-search. authorship. andror publi-
cation of this article.
Note
1.
The data on which Figure I is based arc derived from year-by-year searches
of Google Scholar for the combination of the terms "child sexual abuse" and
- grooming." excluding citations and patents. One should not assume that the
underlying database is complete or that all the publications included in the count
use "grooming" in this way or represent peer-reviewed literature, as newsletters.
government reports, books, and other documents also make their way into such
searches, Nonetheless, the graph gives an adequate representation of the growing
use of the term "grooming' for this purpose.
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Author Biography
Park Dietz. MD. MPH. PhD. was educated at Cornell. Johns Hopkins. and the
University of Pennsylvania. and taught for 10 years at Harvard Medical School and
the University of Virginia School of Law and School of Medicine. He is now a clini-
cal professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at University of California. Los
Angeles (UCLA). As president of Park Dietz & Associates. Inc.. he regularly over-
sees forensic evaluations of psychological damages and expert assessments of liabil-
ity in child sexual abuse litigation, and as president of Threat Assessment Group. Inc..
he regularly panicipatcs in the development and implementation of programs to pre-
vent and respond to misconduct in organizations and institutions.
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