I'm thinking in particular about Vanessa George who was found guilty of sexual assault and distributing indecent pictures of children in a Plymouth nursery (I'm writing an essay/report if you wondered about my motivation, and although it's about children's eyewitness testimony, the case brief we were given made me think about how I felt differently about male and female sexual offenders).
My first thoughts when hearing about women taking part in this type of crime is 'what on earth would make them to do that'? and wonder about the experiences and circumstances that led her up to that point, other peoples influences on her maybe? Possibly abused as a child or adult?
And although I would eventually wonder the same on hearing of a man doing the same, my first reaction would be one of 'you fucking bastard
' .
Could society/people/the general public, whatever you want to call us collectively, be less inclined to blame a woman for sexually assaulting a child and diffuse responsibility for her actions on to her environment? Whereas men are assigned more personal responsibility for their actions and could stop if they wanted to?
I've asked it in the feminist section because I think it comes down to the 'caring' role women are seen as having, nobody wants to believe a woman would do such a thing. But if it's a role mostly constructed by and for men, surely the perceptions would be reversed and men would promote more understanding of other men who sexually assault children wouldn't they? (although I'm not saying men or women are 'better' or 'worse' than the other when it comes to assaulting a child, both are despicable).
Do you think society does perceive them differently?
Does it have anything to do with the different roles men and women are perceived to have by some people?