DURHAM, N.H. – Two new studies from the University of New Hampshire Crimes against Children Research Center suggest that concerns about teen sexting may be overblown. One study found the percentage of youth who send nude pictures of themselves that would qualify as child pornography is very low. The other found that when teen sexting images do get to police, few youth are being arrested or treated like sex offenders.
The studies were carried out by researchers at the University of New Hampshire's Crimes against Children Research Center, and published online today by the journal "Pediatrics." The research is presented in the studies "Prevalence and Characteristics of Youth Sexting: A National Study" and "How Often Are Teens Arrested for Sexting? Data From a National Sample of Police Cases."
In the first study, UNH researchers surveyed 1,560 Internet users ages 10 through 17 about their experiences with sexting -- appearing in, creating, or receiving sexual images or videos via cell phone or the Internet. The study found that 2.5 percent of youth surveyed have participated in sexting in the past year, but only 1 percent involved images that potentially violate child pornography laws -- images that showed "naked breasts, genitals or bottoms."
"Lots of people may be hearing about these cases discovered by schools and parents, because they create a furor, but it still involves a very small minority of youth," said lead author Kimberly Mitchell, research assistant professor of psychology at the UNH Crimes against Children Research Center.
In the second study, researchers discovered that in most sexting cases investigated by the police, no juvenile arrest occurred. There was an arrest in 36 percent of the cases where there were aggravating activities by youth, such as using the images to blackmail or harass other youth. In cases without aggravating elements, the arrest rate was 18 percent.
The second study was based on a national sample of 675 sexting cases collected from a systematic survey of law enforcement agencies. The study also found that the very few teens who were subjected to sex offender registration had generally committed other serious offenses like extortion and forcible rape."Most law enforcement officials are handling these sexting cases in a thoughtful way and not treating teens like sex offenders and child pornographers," said lead author Janis Wolak, senior researcher at the UNH Crimes against Children Research Center.
In both studies, researchers found that sexual images of youth rarely were widely distributed online as many parents, youth, and law enforcement fear. In the teen survey, 90 percent of the youth said the images they created did not go beyond the intended recipient. Even in the cases where the images came to the attention of the police, two-thirds of the images stayed on cell phones and never circulated online.
To learn more, visit the center online at: http://www.unh.edu/ccrc/index.html.




Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
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mollyminks 12-31-2011 @ 11:55AM
I think kids should not have cell phones until they are old enough to be responsible with them. Too many kids have them and sexting will continue to get bigger in society as long as we give children the opportunity to sext.
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rob 1-16-2012 @ 12:00PM
Even if it is not happening with as many kids as we think, I have of several situations where this has happened and it is terrible.
To try and combat stuff like this Im working on a project to try and increase the amount of charitable acts of service online. I have built a big tiger with jet wings that I'm going to ride off a ramp. The kicker is for every digital good deed that someone does and posts on my website I will add one bottle rocket to the engine. What do you think? check it out. space-tiger.com
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Wendy White 3-07-2012 @ 5:30PM
I have a great app on my daughter's android smartphone. It is called Parental Time Control. I select the times of day and days of week phone is available for my child to use. There are NO monthly fees! Here is the direct link to the android market:https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.phone.lock&feature=search_result#?t=W251bGwsMSwyLDEsImNvbS5waG9uZS5sb2NrIl0.
It makes me a better parent!
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Pam 7-21-2012 @ 3:36PM
I'm sorry but I still worry about my kids sexting! I want to spread the word about my solution to help other parents: MMGuardian Parental Control! If you download it FREE from https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mmguardian&hl=en you will be able to see if your kids are sending OR receiving sexually explicit messages and take action!
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