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Journal Article

Citation

Seibold-Simpson SM, McKinnon AM, Mattson RE, Ortiz E, Merriwether AM, Massey SG, Chiu I. J. Interpers. Violence 2018; ePub(ePub): 886260518795171.

Affiliation

Binghamton University, NY, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0886260518795171

PMID

30139298

Abstract

Rapes perpetrated during college are both common and underreported. Research highlights that several person- and incident-level factors relating to gender and sexuality may diminish reporting, by themselves and as they pertain to attributions of blame for the assault. In this study, male and female college students ( N = 916) read vignettes describing a rape perpetrated by a man against a woman, a man against a man, or a woman against a man. Participants rated the blameworthiness of both perpetrator and victim and rated the likelihood that they would disclose the rape to social ties or health services or report it to authorities if they were in the victim's position. We found that male gender and heterosexual orientation predicted higher victim blame, lower perpetrator blame, and lower likelihood of disclosure, although relative endorsement of masculine gender ideology seemed to be driving these associations, as well as predicted lower likelihood of reporting to authorities. Controlling for other factors, vignettes portraying a woman raping a man led to a lower likelihood of disclosing or reporting the assault, compared with a male-on-female rape. We also found that the effects of female-on-male rape and traditional masculine ideologies tied to rape disclosure partially by decreasing blame to the perpetrator, which itself carried a unique influence on decisions to report. Our findings overall indicate that factors related to gender, sexuality, and blame have myriad influences and may contribute to low rates of disclosing rape to important outlets.


Language: en

Keywords

female offenders; male victims; reporting/disclosure; sexual assault; situational factors

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