# Cyber-Sexual Crime and Social Inequality: Exploring Socioeconomic and Technological Determinants

**Authors:** Carlos J. Mármol, Aurelio Luna, Isabel Legaz

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15111547 · 2025-11-13

## TL;DR

This paper explores how socioeconomic and technological factors influence the distribution of cyber-sexual crimes in Spain, showing that vulnerable regions and groups are disproportionately affected.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the regional patterns and structural determinants of cyber-sexual crimes in Spain using a combination of crime data and socioeconomic indicators.

## Key findings

- Cyber-sexual crimes in Spain increased nationally, with grooming and harassment showing the most growth.
- Regions like the Balearic Islands, Canary Islands, and Andalusia had the highest incidence rates of cyber-sexual crimes.
- Educational disadvantages and low income were linked to sexual abuse, while digital connectivity was associated with technology-facilitated offenses.

## Abstract

Cyber-sexual crimes have become a growing concern in the digital age, as rapid technological progress continues to create new forms of violence and victimization. These offenses affect society unevenly, striking more intensely among minors, women, and other vulnerable groups. Their prevalence is shaped by structural inequalities, educational, economic, and technological, that condition both exposure to digital risks and the capacity for protection. Although international research has connected these disparities with digital victimization, evidence from Spain remains limited. The aim was to analyze the regional distribution of cyber-sexual crimes in Spain between 2011 and 2022 and to explore how education, income, and digital access relate to their incidence. To this end, official data from the Spanish Statistical Crime Portal (PEC) were combined with structural indicators provided by the Spanish National Institute of Statistics. The analysis encompassed reported cases of sexual abuse, sexual harassment, corruption of minors, online grooming, exhibitionism, pornography, and sexual provocation, using standardized incidence rates per 100,000 inhabitants. Statistical methods included ANOVA with post hoc comparisons, correlation analyses, and K-means clustering to identify territorial patterns. Results revealed a sustained national increase in cyber-sexual crimes, with grooming and sexual harassment showing the most pronounced growth. The Balearic Islands (mean 4.9), Canary Islands (4.0), and Andalusia (3.9) registered the highest incidence rates, well above the national average (3.0). Educational disadvantages and low income were linked to sexual abuse and corruption of minors, whereas greater digital connectivity, expressed through higher mobile phone use, broadband access, and computer ownership, was strongly associated with grooming and other technology-facilitated offenses. Cluster analysis identified three distinct territorial profiles: high-incidence regions (Balearic and Canary Islands, Andalusia), intermediate (Murcia, Madrid, Navarre, Valencian Community), and low-incidence (Galicia, Catalonia, Castile and León, among others). In conclusion, the findings demonstrate that cyber-sexual crimes in Spain are unevenly distributed and closely linked to persistent structural vulnerabilities that shape digital exposure. These results underscore the need for territorially sensitive prevention strategies that reduce educational and economic inequalities, foster sexual and digital literacy, and promote safer online environments. Without addressing these underlying structural dimensions, public policies risk overlooking the conditions that sustain regional disparities and limit adequate protection against technology-driven sexual crimes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** sexual abuse (MESH:D000082002)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649298/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649298