Title: |
Recovered Memories of Child Sexual Abuse
|
Editor: |
Sheila Taub |
Publisher: |
Charles C. Thomas, ©1999 |
Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, Ltd.
2600 South First Street
Springfield, IL 62794-9265
Hardcover: $44.95, Paper: $31.95
This is possibly the best book yet published that offers a succinct
and authoritative overview of the controversy over claims of recovered,
repressed memories of childhood sexual abuse. In seven crisply
edited chapters the rise and fall of the contemporary recovered memory
phenomenon is traced. One chapter gives a sensitive and balanced
picture of the clinical aspects of claims of recovered memories.
The scientific evidence relative to special mechanisms of memory is
marshaled in three chapters that are noteworthy for the breadth of
issues and scientific research covered.
The most useful chapter, given the present reality of such claims, is
the seventh chapter that covers the legal response in the litigation about
this question. It makes it clear that the legal system has concluded
there is little or no basis for claims that memories of past abuse have
been recovered through a special memory process of repression. The
graphs presenting the frequency of legal actions, civil and criminal, show
that after a peak in 1992-1994, the suits have dropped to almost zero.
There may be a number in the courts that still have to reach a final
resolution, but very little, if any, new litigation appears to be taking
place.
This chapter also offers an overview of the civil actions brought
against therapists, hospitals, and physicians by those falsely accused and
those who claim to have been victims of malpractice that caused false
memories of childhood abuse. There have been several such suits in
which the plaintiffs have been granted substantial damages.
The Introduction by the editor includes a clear, thorough, yet brief
summary of the relevance of the U. S. Supreme Court’s Daubert /
Kumho Tire rulings concerning the admissibility of scientific evidence
to the claims made in the courts.
This book is highly recommended for anyone who wants to know all that
is needed to know about the assertions of recovered memories of childhood
abuse.
Reviewed by Ralph Underwager, Institute for Psychological Therapies.