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OverviewThis Open Access book explores how teens use social media, how they produce, consume, and share sexual images, and how they understand and respond to harmful digital sexual content and interactions. Capturing the views of nearly 500 young people across the UK our book shows how image-based sexual harassment and abuse (IBSHA) impacts all young people and is a society wide problem that needs to be urgently addressed. Developing a socio-cultural and tech affordances approach to understanding social media platform economies, we show how game-like engagement features keep users on apps and expanding their networks, opening up teens to considerable online risk and harms. We argue a lack of consent in the digital environments intersects with society-wide, age old norms of gender and sexual inequalities, facilitating image-based sexual harassment and abuse (IBSHA). Educational policy and curriculum focused on abstinence anti-sexing messaging and a focus on child pornography laws, fail to address gendered and sexualised power dynamics and peer on peer abuse. We argue a multifaceted approach is needed to improve the law, technology companies and education. Better digital literacy and sex education that covers social media use, risk, harms and reporting in platform specific ways would offer better supports for youth. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jessica Ringrose , Kaitlyn RegehrPublisher: Springer International Publishing AG Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan ISBN: 9783031923210ISBN 10: 3031923219 Pages: 300 Publication Date: 11 August 2025 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1. An introduction to social media apps, platform economies, consent, images, and abuse.- 2. South East Community College: Youth social media ‘produsers’ and the apps opening the floodgates to non-consensual sexual images.- 3. Lion’s Co-Educational Independent Boarding School: How highly selective school status shapes digital sexual cultures and identities.- 4. Outer North Academy: Tech facilitated violence, racism and peer produced porn - the entanglement of mobile digital networks and physical school and neighborhood based abuse.- 5. Central Comprehensive: Religion, digital sexual double standards, shaming and victim blaming.- 6. Stags School for Boys: Elite Masculinities, nudes as homosocial currency and mastering your digital footprint.- 7. North West Secondary: Self commodification, porn push, and platform, peer group and school based barriers to reporting image based abuse.- 8. Swans School for Girls: Performing high achieving femininities, sexy selfies and digital dating dynamics in an all-girls school.- 9. Conclusion: Image based sexual harassment and abuse affects everyone so how can we support young people better?.ReviewsAuthor InformationJessica Ringrose is Professor of Sociology of Gender and Education at IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society, London, UK, where she co-directs the UCL Centre for Sociology of Education and Equity. She is an internationally recognized and widely cited expert on gender and sexual equity in education and youth digital sexual cultures. She has collaborated and published on these topics with colleagues in in USA, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Sweden, Denmark, Wales and Ireland. Kaitlyn Regehr is Associate Professor and Programme Director of Digital Humanities at University College London. Her work has informed legislation on children’s safety online including the Online Safety Act. Dr Regehr is committed to building data empowered societies and making academic ideas accessible through broadcasting and interactive new technology and has produced and served as a topic specialist on documentaries for BBC News, BBC Women’s Hour, Channel 4 and the Economist. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |