The abuser seems to be kept in the family and remains accepted
Indirectly in my mind one of the things I was thinking of was how a programme that encourages the family to accept the abuser more and keep them in the family (encouraged supervised exposure) is going to mean one more child is protected or make anyone more responsible. I may not be understanding the type of programme being suggested but am struggling to see how it would protect one child and can only see it increasing the amount of children that are kept exposed to their abuser. Even if it stops further abuse they are going to be constantly exposed to triggers and it could have huge psychological effects on their recovery.
Family are already either 1/ likely to want nothing to do with the abuser and keep their children away, 2/ do supervised visits anyway, or 3/ often have issues that make it unlikely that they would connect to a programme like this or be capable of enforcing reliable supervision. Even if they have assertiveness issues the abuser is likely to be dominant and manipulative and be able to get around controls (group 3).
Abusers are most often already still kept in the family and it is the abused that is usually ostracised from what I can tell. Is anyone that has enough issues that they would normally ostracise a child harmed who has the courage to tell going to be transformed into someone capable of caring enough about the child's well-being to manage supervision closely and diligently enough?
It's not as if any abuser is going to tell everyone what they have done and to encourage others to believe the child. They would quite likely already be accepted by the group that is most concerning and are never going to give themselves away. It sounds a little like putting an OK stamp on what often happens already or relying on not very motivated people to protect a child. Group 1/ and 2/ are already motivated so they are not relevant when it comes to the programme.
I wish I could put this clearly into words but I can't find a way to do it. My brain is bubbling. I of course may be getting the entire wrong end of the stick about the suggested programme and about the issues that put people in harms way. I am also not doubting for one second that supervised is better than unsupervised. I just cannot get my head around how encouraged supervised contact is a good thing or is going to protect anyone from abuse that would not already be protected without the programme.
I know others here are talking about the hidden issues with supervised contact. The distress of finding out that everyone knew a family member was an abuser and yet still placed them in the position where they developed a relationship with the person. Leaving them with potential feelings of betrayal after and discomfort whilst growing up. I think these are very legitimate opinions but I am afraid I am not up to the discussion so will leave it to others.
I think conversations about supervised and unsupervised contact are both important and one doesn't have to detract from the other.