The media
Journalism’s News Values
“News values” guide the types of stories journalists report on. Examples of news values are:
Impact
Information has impact if it affects a lot of people.
Timeliness
Information has timeliness if it happened recently.
Prominence
Information has prominence if it involves a well-known person or organisation.
Proximity
Information has proximity if it involves something happening somewhere nearby.
Conflict
Information has conflict if it involves disagreement.
Unusual
Information may involve something unusual.
Currency
Information has currency if it is related to some general topic a lot of people are already
talking about.
Negativity
Bad news.
Exclusivity
Information is exclusive if one news outlet publishes it first.
Human interest
Stories about human experience.
Defining and measuring the prevalence of child sexual abuse
Child sexual abuse is a crime. While there is no universal definition, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse defined child sexual abuse as ‘any act that exposes a child to, or involves a child in, sexual processes that are beyond their understanding, are contrary to accepted community standards, or are outside what is permitted by law’.
The Australian Child Maltreatment Study (ACMS) estimates that more than one in four (28.5%) Australians have experienced child sexual abuse. Those who identify as females were twice as likely to have experienced child sexual abuse compared to males (37.3% of females compared to 18.8% of males).
The ACMS found that child sexual abuse rarely happens once and it often co-occurs with other forms of child maltreatment. Most victims and survivors of child sexual abuse (78%) reported that the abuse occurred multiple times. Around four in ten victims and survivors (42%) experienced child sexual abuse more than six times. Around one in ten victims and survivors (11%) experienced it more than 50 times.
The ACMS further identified the profound impacts of child maltreatment, including on mental and physical health outcomes. When compared with people who have not experienced child maltreatment, those who experienced child maltreatment: are more likely to have a mental disorder (48%), compared with around one in five (21.6%) of those who did not experience maltreatment; are three times more likely to have Major Depressive Disorder (24.6% compared with 8.1%); are 3.9 times more likely to have self-harmed in the past year; and are 4.6 times more likely to have attempted
suicide in the past year.
Visit the ACMS website for more information.