The alleged sexual abuse of boys by a longtime coach at Penn State* has focused media attention once again on the issue. For the parents of the alleged victims, of course, their worst nightmares have come true. But what could have been done to prevent it? And is the culture of male sports itself at least partially to blame?
The sad fact, as noted in an article by Michael Hartill, a lecturer in the Department of Sport and Physical Activity at Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England who has studied sexual abuse of boys in sports extensively, is that "the largely unregulated world of children's sport has typically been slow to address the issue of sexual abuse of youth athletes."
The alleged sexual abuse of boys by a longtime coach at Penn State has
focused media attention once again on the issue. For the parents of the
alleged victims, of course, one their worst nightmares has come true.
But what could have been done to prevent it? And is the culture of male sports itself at least partially to blame?