1. Introduction
1. Children’s rights and the protection
of children against sexual violence in various forms have been a priority
for the Parliamentary Assembly and especially the Committee on Social
Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development for many years. Amongst
the topical areas of concern is the increasing trend of “over-sexualisation”
of children in modern society, in particular in the media (television,
Internet, social media), marketing campaigns and related industries,
notably by exposing children to content that is not appropriate.
2. Based on the most valuable contribution from a European expert,
Ms Nadine Schirtz from the National Youth Service of Luxembourg,
the present report gives an overview of the issue. As rapporteur,
I notably wish to highlight the different forms, facets, causes
and consequences of the over-sexualisation or inappropriate sexualisation
of children, before proposing action to be taken by different players.
In doing so, I am drawing upon the expert information memorandum
without citing all individual sources used; only new sources are explicitly
mentioned.
3. What are the main concerns about the over-sexualisation of
children? What appears, at first glance, as a very specific topic,
is in fact a complex phenomenon of concern to us all: the sexualised
presentation of men, women, and even children, in the media influences
our perception of girls and women, and may in the long run have
an influence on their social status and their well-being. Sexualised
images of children and notably girls may also be closely connected
to various forms of sexual violence, such as child abuse images,
and may in some cases be a factor leading to sexual abuse. Policy
responses are therefore needed urgently and at many levels.
4. Whilst the European institutions need to send out the right
political messages and develop standards, national parliaments need
to strengthen relevant legislation defining limits for the production,
use and distribution of sexualised images and governments need to
remind parents of their role in protecting their children from over-sexualisation,
and to develop targeted policies to support parents and safeguard
the innocence and dignity of children. Next to action taken by the
central authorities, I would also like to promote the role of institutions
involved in the education and care of children, as well as that
of the family and children’s and young people’s peers.
5. All those in contact with children, in charge of producing
and conveying child images, or of supervising such activities should
be made aware of dangerous content conveyed through the media, of
the means for preventing it, of alternatives to sexualisation and
healthier ways of depicting children, and of measures making children
resilient to the seduction of sexualised images giving them the
illusion of behaving in an adult manner.
2. The driving forces behind sexualisation:
expressions, causes and consequences
6. The way in which we perceive
ourselves as men and women is defined by biology and gender-specific characteristics
conveyed through family values, education and the social environment.
In this social environment, different kinds of media are strong
players for all of us, including for our children. The sexualisation
of children happens in everyday life, in the media, in advertising
campaigns, through industrial and consumer products, and often in
a manner which is not age appropriate, thus as “over-sexualisation”. Following
this understanding, the notions of sexualisation and over-sexualisation
may sometimes be used in a synonymous manner in the present report.
2.1. Expressions
and causes of children’s sexualisation
7. Children and especially young
girls wearing pretty clothes and make-up and teenagers dressing
like grown-ups, are just some of the visible expressions of children’s
early sexualisation. Children want to be like their idols they have
seen on television, in magazines or in advertisements. However,
sexualisation, thus the reduction of children to their gender-related
and sexual features, or the overemphasising of such features, must not
be confounded with early sexual behaviour. The sexualisation or
even “objectification” of children is driven by adult imagination
and is imposed on children before they are even capable of fully
understanding or dealing with it.
8. What are the reasons for depicting children in a sexualised
manner? Many marketing concepts are based on the assumption that
“sex sells” and that people are more receptive to messages when
they are in an emotionally excited state. Playing with “sexy” images
often gives a product more attention from its potential buyers.
Adolescent boys and girls are an important target group for fashion,
beauty and lifestyle products, usually supported by their parents’
spending power. Even in the younger age range of 8 to 12, children
are important consumers as they remain interested both in children’s
toys and teenage and grown-up products.
9. Sexualisation predominantly affects girls who are more often
than boys depicted in a sexualised manner in media and advertising
campaigns. However, boys are clearly concerned as well if only because
they too are reduced to their looks and gender-related qualities.
Any depiction of persons according to sexual features is inevitably
a gender subject and therefore affects both sexes. The sexualisation
of girls thus also influences the way in which they are perceived
by boys.
10. Why are children so sensitive to role models? According to
the German “KIM-study”, two
thirds of 6 to 13 year-olds are fond of an individual person or
group. In 38% of the cases, these come from film or television. One
in five children mention a person from the music industry they admire.
However, girls (73%) are more likely to have an idol from the pop
culture scene than boys (41%) who mostly find their idols in sports
(44% compared to the 5% of girls).
11. In the phase of identity-building, people with a strong public
presence often serve children as a projection screen for their own
future plans and dreams. Children’s “adoration” of movie and pop
stars might have an influence on how they see themselves and want
to be seen by others. This fantasy becomes even more reachable with
the new television formats: casting shows for teenage models, singers
or actors convey a tempting but treacherous message of “you can
be one of us” to our children.
12. Why is the role of the media and the media industry so crucial
when it comes to preventing the over-sexualisation of children?
From an early age, children are the first media users: 92% of all
European Union households with dependent children have access to
a computer and 80% of young people (16-29) use a computer on a daily
basis in 2014.
Even younger children have their
own social media profile (20% of 8 to 11 year-olds and 70% of 12
to 15 year-olds) – whilst the amount of time children spend online
has more than doubled, from 4.4 hours a week in 2005 to 11.1 hours
in 2015 for 8 to 11s and from 8 hours to 18.9 for 12 to 15s.
13. Member States should control this situation by forbidding
the publication of sexual messages in any child-accessible media
and, on the contrary, by promoting positive messages of holistic
self-development, addressed to children and respectful of their
human dignity and every philosophical and religious tradition.
2.2. Mechanisms
and consequences of sexualisation
14. The increasing sexualisation
of children and their definition as sexual beings in the media,
marketing campaigns and consumer products leads us all into subconsciously
accepting such concepts and images as social norms. Children themselves,
imitating adult behaviour without any reflection, often accept these
norms and try to live up to the expectations forced upon them.
15. Sexualised messages, including sexist publicity and adult
roles imposed on children, are often received sub-consciously. Consumers
get used to them and do not pay attention anymore, whilst in some
cases even giving in to such models, for example by dressing girls
like little princesses. An 18-year-old girl having watched casting
shows for many years, may consider that what she sees on the screen
is normal life and the way to be.
16. In the end, we are all under the subconscious influence of
stereotypes, for example by valuing young women for their attractiveness
rather than their intellectual or social contributions to society.
Researchers have found that even brief contacts with sexualised
representations of women and men are sufficient for the viewer to
think that a person is less competent thus less likely to have good
professional skills. Wherever applied in a real life context, such
mechanisms can have a dramatic effect on children’s and young people’s
further development through the way in which they are perceived
by others.
17. Another consequence of the permanent sexualisation of children
is the influence on children’s self-perception and self-esteem.
Bombarded by the beauty and fashion industry as well as by mainstream
media, being sexually attractive becomes a priority for many teenagers.
This allows industry and marketing campaigns to affect children
via their weak body image. A campaign in the United Kingdom (“Be
real”) aimed at promoting body confidence found that a third of
children often worry about the way they look, which is also the
largest cause of bullying in school.
18. For individual children, the vicious circle and “self-fulfilling
prophecy” consists in increasingly lowering their self-esteem where
they do not comply with the norm spread by their favourite media.
Their attempt to comply with beauty standards, an exaggerated interest
in fashion and beauty products or even problematic or disordered
eating behaviours (for example anorexia or bulimia) are just the
tip of the iceberg. Many more children suffer from low self-esteem,
self-doubt or negative body awareness – frequent phenomena in teenage years
and phases of adolescent identity-building – without showing it.
Finally, the anchorage of sexualised images as a social norm can
have most dramatic consequences for children’s lives: many girls
facing the above problems have made suicide attempts.
19. Independent of trends observed in the media environment, the
(sexual) behaviour of young girls has changed over the past decades,
and so has the age when they reach puberty, which is certainly another
factor for changes in their self-perception and sensitivity to sexualised
images. Different studies prove that girls in the United States
and Europe reach puberty earlier than previous generations. Amongst
the reasons for this, researchers see changed hormonal patterns
(due to obesity, hormones in food, chemical toxins, etc.) and more exposure
to unrelated male figures such as stepfathers or boyfriends.
20. As experts report, nowadays many children in their teens see
sex as a prerequisite to an intimate relationship, rather than a
consequence of intimacy. Sexual activity is considered safe, like
holding hands, and no longer considered an intimate act. Teenagers
will openly talk about sex in public, not caring about who is listening.
This attitude becomes visible in the phenomenon of “sexting”, that
is to say the sharing of intimate pictures and messages via Internet
and smartphones. Children across Europe are found to be getting
involved in such activities in a very naïve manner, and many nude
pictures find their way into the public sphere, very often against
the will of the person depicted. Some countries even report an increasing
number of teenagers willing to prostitute themselves, either to
finance their consumption of cigarettes, alcohol or drugs or to
buy beauty or fashion products, or even to finance their studies
if their families are not in a position to do so.
21. Finally, another risk is that messages sent out to children
are not coherent. While parents and other carers across Europe teach
children about their right to gender equality, women’s rights, self-awareness,
self-esteem and a life free from violence, the messages children
receive via the media are full of hero men, submissive women and,
very often, violent relationships. For children, this results in
attitudes where they would fully agree that you should not judge
people by their looks, but still feel the pressure to comply with
certain stereotypes.
22. Double standards have also recently been noted by American
researchers, who have found that social media amplify the self-awareness
of young girls. Whilst being a teenager has never been easy, charm,
looks and popularity have now become readily quantifiable and mistakes
easier to spot than ever before. For many girls, the constant seeking
of “likes” and attention on social media feels like being a contestant
in a never-ending beauty contest focussing disproportionately on
appearance and leading to competition and bullying. Whilst some
would respond that the voluntary “objectification” of girls is a
sign of their sexual empowerment, others rightly criticise the fact
that most pornography tends to present female sexuality as something
that primarily exists to the benefit of men.
Such incoherence needs to be tackled
urgently through measures at various levels. Our societies need
to create an everyday environment, including a media environment, facilitating
children’s development.
3. Multiple
responses to counter the over-sexualisation of children
23. As mentioned above, the sexualisation
of children by our societies is not just related to the media or publicity.
It is a larger societal trend of concern to us all. Responses are
therefore needed from parents first, law and policy makers, industrial
players, the advertising sector, the media at large, Internet providers
and publishers, but also any person in charge of educating or caring
for children, including teachers and families. Finally, children
themselves need to be made aware of the risks of over-sexualisation
and be empowered to become and remain independent of such trends
and threats. This must be done without making children feel guilty
and without delegating to them the fundamental responsibilities
of parents and educators.
3.1. European
standards and recommendations
24. The Council of Europe has been
very active in setting and implementing child protection and children’s rights
standards for many years, notably under its programme “Building
a Europe for and with Children” and its subsequent “Strategies for
the Rights of the Child”, the latest of which covers the period
2016 to 2021 and was launched in Sofia in April 2016. Although fighting
the over-sexualisation of children could certainly still be addressed
more explicitly, the Council of Europe has developed interesting
activities more or less directly related to this field.
25. Certain Council of Europe texts contain useful elements regarding
media literacy and media supervisory mechanisms, in particular Committee
of Ministers Recommendation
CM/Rec(2013)1 on
gender equality and media adopted in June 2013. Some of the most
interesting measures suggested therein also seem to apply to the
oversexualisation of children, for example:
- Encourage media organisations to adopt self-regulatory
measures, internal codes of conduct/ethics and internal supervision,
and develop standards in media coverage that promotes gender equality
in order to promote a consistent internal policy aimed at a non-stereotyped
image, role and visibility of women and men, avoidance of sexist
advertising, language and content which could lead to discrimination
on grounds of sex, incitement to hatred and gender-based violence;
- Encourage the media to provide information to the public
in a clear way (online for example) on the complaints procedure
in relation to media content, support and promote good practices
through the development of networks and partnerships and encourage
non-governmental organisations, media associations, individuals
and other relevant stakeholders to bring their concerns to self-regulatory
bodies or other specialised bodies;
- Promote gender sensitive media literacy for the young
generation, prepare young people to approach different forms of
media content responsibly and enable them to acquire a critical
view of media representations of gender and to decode sexist stereotypes;
enhance the gender equality perspective in the media literacy programmes
for young people of different ages as a factor for broad human rights education
and active involvement in the democratic processes.
26. The Parliamentary Assembly, for its part, had certainly prepared
the grounds for this recommendation notably through
Resolution 1557 (2007) and
Recommendation
1799 (2007) on the image of women in advertising. Especially in
the latter, the Assembly called on the Committee of Ministers to
“draw up a European code of good conduct encouraging advertising
professionals to present images which are not discriminatory and
respect the dignity of women and men”. Similar lines could be followed
when it comes to calling for action against the over-sexualisation
of children. Further relevant elements can also be found in
Resolution 2001 (2014) and
Recommendation
2048 (2014) on violence in and through the media.
27. Similar standards could be developed on protecting children
against over-sexualisation by the competent standard-setting bodies
of the Council of Europe, for example through the Gender Equality Commission
(GEC), where the above Recommendation CM/Rec(2013)1 was drafted.
3.2. Possible
legislative action at the national level
28. Implementing European standards
at the national level always leads us to examine possible legislative action
first. Examining the full range of possible legal action to be taken
against over-sexualisation in detail here would exceed the scope
of this report. However, it may be said that, legally, the issue
could be tackled from different angles, including the prohibition
of illegal child abuse images (previously often called child pornography)
and the prohibition of online grooming, which is considered to be
an illegal act in the framework of the Council of Europe Convention
on the Protection of Children against Sexual Exploitation and Sexual Abuse
(CETS No. 201, “Lanzarote Convention”) (even if not followed by
an actual physical act of sexual abuse).
29. Legislative action could also refer to different social contexts
in which sexualised images of children are conveyed, such as beauty
contests for children. A positive example of this is the French
legislation passed in January 2014 to prohibit beauty contests for
girls under 13 (“mini-miss”) and to require prior authorisation
for contests involving girls aged 13 to 16.
30. Legal action against over-sexualised images of children as
such is not as easy to take, because most images we are speaking
of here are produced with children’s consent or even by children
themselves. Pictures exchanged between children and their peers
via social networks and smartphones go widely unnoticed by adults.
The issue will mostly have to be tackled by re-defining ethical
standards and finding new agreements on what is harmful for children;
this is a huge cultural challenge. Not forgetting that any legal
action taken needs to respect the right to freedom of expression.
3.3. Guidance
for families, teachers and carers
31. In order to protect children
from becoming victims of over-sexualisation, they need to be educated
about it. In the digital world we are living in, education needs
to involve media literacy and open communication about problems
and risks that may be caused by the media or exist in a media environment.
For me as rapporteur, but also
as a politician and father, this must involve both the development
of positive media skills to allow children and young people to live
up to their full potential, but also the promotion of critical attitudes
towards problematic media formats and contents.
32. As already described above, in the modern world, the media
influence to a great extent what is being perceived and accepted
as a normal standard; they define ideal body images and social behaviour.
The younger a child, the easier he or she can be influenced by media
messages. Sexualised children, that is to say children depicted
in a sexualised manner, perform roles which they cannot yet fully
understand.
33. The approach to sexuality and relationship education is very
different from one European country to another and even within a
country, depending on school guidelines and the impact of religion,
philosophies and traditions. Unfortunately, while some families
are educating their children about sexuality in an appropriate and sensitive
way, many are failing to do so as they see sexuality education as
a task to be carried out by schools, thus obliging their children
to self-educate on the Internet and leading to a distorted and confused understanding
of sexuality.
34. If parents are unable or unwilling to provide answers, children
will turn to other sources, mostly the Internet, which provides
a full range of video and photo material from sensible educational
websites to hard-core pornographic movies. Keeping children away
from computers or blocking access to media contents is only a temporary
solution because curious children will find other means of accessing
problematic contents or get access at their friends’ homes. Children
need to be educated about their dignity and worth so that they feel
less pressure to conform to sexualised stereotypes.
35. Parents are best placed to help children understand their
own sexuality. The simple statement “Pornography is not the depiction
of real sex, but pure fiction played by actors” can make a huge
difference!
3.4. Empowering
and supporting children
36. The development of information
and communication technologies has accelerated children’s sexualisation,
and changed the way in which they perceive their bodies and approach
sexuality. The key tool for empowering children and young people
to resist the pressure and influence of sexualised images is strong education
starting in the home, thus helping children to understand the pressures
they are submitted to in today’s society
37. Whatever the origin and context of delivery of such programmes,
they should contain sexual and non-sexual elements (“life skills”),
foster the self-awareness and self-esteem of children, promote positive
body images (rather than questionable beauty standards) and help
children develop critical attitudes towards the media as such and
the contents conveyed.
38. Through education tackling the issue in a transversal manner,
led by parents, negative messages need to be turned into positive
ones helping children to become strong and self-aware personalities.
Children’s behaviour is strongly influenced by what they observe
around them, and particularly amongst those they believe to be similar
to themselves. Children’s peers are therefore important factors
in any kind of education.
39. Promoting positive body awareness, images and attitudes can
also protect children against the more severe consequences of over-sexualisation.
Positive programmes can help avoid depression, eating disorders, as
well as suicidal thoughts or attempts, for example by inciting children
to practise sports, dance and music or outdoor activities in contact
with nature; all activities which may seem less spectacular to modern
children growing up in a digital environment but so much more valuable
than passively looking good or “sexy”. Children and young people
who are used to sharing most intimate images and messages via social
networks and mobile devices must learn (again) that their bodies
are precious and private, that sharing intimate photos with a partner (“sexting”)
is not an ultimate proof of love and trust and that they are allowed
to say no to sexual requests.
3.5. Engaging
the producers
41. Media, advertising and industrial
companies also need to assume their responsibilities when it comes
to the messages and products delivered to children and young people.
As long as products are assumed to sell better through campaigns
and programmes that use sexualised images, the situation is difficult
to change. In an ideal world, media output would become self-regulatory
in a way that is consistent with moral and ethical values shared
by most; however, in practice this is not always the case, although
some countries such as Germany have agencies for the “voluntary
self-control” of film and television productions (beyond public
control institutions).
42. In the meantime, in a world where media and advertising companies
do not always play along ethical lines, the role of the media and
advertising ethics committees or audiovisual supervisory agencies
is to keep an eye on the media landscape in order to intervene whenever
human rights, including children’s rights, are violated. In this
context, children’s rights should include the right not to be portrayed
in sexualised ways and not to be carelessly exposed to inappropriate
representations of sexuality without having the maturity required.
43. Examples for supervisory bodies are the
Conseil
Supérieur de l’Audiovisuel (CSA = Superior Audiovisual Council)
in France, or the Independent regulator and competition authority
for the communications industries (Ofcom) in the United Kingdom.
Through supervisory mechanisms,
players of the media and advertising sectors should also be held
accountable. This means that Audio-visual supervisory mechanisms
must include channels for complaints which will be taken seriously.
44. To encourage the social responsibility of media and advertising
producers in particular and the creation of positive media content,
certain incentives could be offered to them, for example through
competitions financed by public authorities. Relevant guidelines
and selection criteria could include the promotion of positive body
images and the empowerment of children and young people to make
their own, autonomous, decisions. Such approaches could become true
models of non-formal education if they involved children and young people
in production and conception processes.
45. A positive example for such competitions of relevance for
the Assembly are the EACA (European Association of Communication
Agencies) Care Awards, a prize which in 2015 was granted to the
awareness-raising video “The Lake” produced by the Parliamentary
Assembly (even though the thematic focus was more on sexual abuse,
not over-sexualisation).
And once again, I would like to
draw attention to a positive example amongst Council of Europe activities,
namely the collection of papers on the Convention on Preventing
and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (CETS
No. 210, “Istanbul Convention”) “Encouraging the participation of
the private sector and the media in the prevention of violence against
women and domestic violence: Article 17 of the Istanbul Convention”.
4. Conclusions
and recommendations
46. The over-sexualisation of children,
that is to say their sexualisation in a manner which is not age-appropriate,
has many facets and finds various expressions in the media, in advertising
and in industrial products. Following the behavioural examples of
adults and peers, children tend to accept sexualised images and
messages as a norm they will try to comply with. In a subtle manner,
this may have a wide range of consequences for them, possibly affecting
their self-awareness, self-esteem, well-being, equal opportunities, social
status and development and even their health and safety.
47. The Assembly should express its concern about these trends,
which severely affect children’s human rights in various ways, not
least to ensure that the issue is taken seriously by all parties
concerned, and that messages sent out to children and young people
are coherent. In the context highlighted here, children and young
people are regularly told that beauty and looks are not everything,
whilst being confronted daily with stereotyped images in the media.
48. In many cultural contexts, children are still confronted with
family and community attitudes where sexuality and relationship
education is a taboo, whilst being flooded with sexualised and even
sexually explicit pictures in the media environment surrounding
them. Our societies, in all their complexity, are facing the challenge
of re-establishing coherence of values conveyed to the young generation
and recognising both media and sexuality and relationship education
as important elements of human rights education in modern societies.
49. Via its resolution and its recommendation, the Assembly should
convey key recommendations with regard to action to be taken by
national governments and other stakeholders in member States of
the Council of Europe, as well as the Council of Europe as such
with a view to establishing frameworks and guidelines for coherent
action. This should notably include:
- measures aimed at empowering families to communicate openly
with their children about sexuality and relationship matters;
- legislative action to define the limits for the sexualised
depiction of children, and notably girls, in the media, in the advertising
sector and in events where children participate, whilst respecting
the fundamental right to freedom of expression;
- setting up supervisory institutions and procedures, encouraging
ethical behaviour of the media and offering effective complaint
mechanisms;
- public policies and tools aimed at raising the awareness
of children and young people to the issue supporting approaches
where children participate in the conception and design of tools
and messages;
- media literacy conveyed in an age-appropriate manner,
aimed at strengthening positive body images and autonomy;
- measures aimed at empowering children to say no to inappropriate
and dangerous behaviour (for example sharing intimate images via
social media).