Survivors of Incest Anonymous
Survivors of Incest Anonymous (SIA) is a
History
In 1987 SIA merged with Sexual Abuse Anonymous headquartered in Long Beach, California.[3] In 1989 SIA merged with Sex Abuse Anonymous, a fellowship headquartered in St. Cloud, Minnesota.[1]
Meetings
In addition to open, mixed gender meetings, SIA designates many meetings as "women only" or "men only." Most SIA groups are not open to those perpetrators of sexual abuse. Meetings that allow perpetrators state this clearly at the beginning of the meeting and will not allow those who are currently perpetrating sexual abuse to attend.[1]
Criticism
Postmodern
Sociologist Norman Denzin argued that groups such as [not specific enough to verify] SIA have a "glossing" effect that causes members to use the same language and framework to describe their experiences thereby having a detrimental homogenizing effect. Sociologist Nancy A. Naples saw the structure of twelve-step fellowships as being antithetical to social change as such groups discourage members from collective political engagement. Author Louise Armstrong saw groups such as SIA as promoting revictimization, explaining that in such groups members are deemed sinful and the fault of their sin and task of redemption are both on their shoulders. Armstrong suggested survivor-generated feminists advocacy organizations challenging the dominant discourse on sexual abuse as a viable alternative.[4]
See also
References
- ^ .
- ISBN 0-89486-759-8.
- PMID 8507050.
- S2CID 146455235.