There is no more seemingly incorrigible criminal type than the child sex
offender. Said to suffer from a deeply rooted paraphilia, he is often
considered as outside the moral limits of the human, profoundly
resistant to change. Despite these assessments, in much of the West an
increasing focus on rehabilitation through therapy provides hope that
psychological transformation is possible. Examining the experiences of
child sex offenders undergoing therapy in Germany--where such treatments
are both a legal right and duty--John Borneman, in Cruel Attachments,
offers a fine-grained account of rehabilitation for this reviled
criminal type.
Carefully exploring different cases of the attempt to rehabilitate child
sex offenders, Borneman details a secular ritual process aimed not only
at preventing future acts of molestation but also at fundamentally
transforming the offender, who is ultimately charged with creating an
almost entirely new self. Acknowledging the powerful repulsion felt by a
public that is often extremely skeptical about the success of
rehabilitation, he challenges readers to confront the contemporary
contexts and conundrums that lie at the heart of regulating intimacy
between children and adults.