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Paper Title

ACQUAINTANCE RAPE: EFFECTIVE AVOIDANCE STRATEGIES

Keywords

  • Acquaintance Rape
  • Rape Avoidance
  • Sexual Assault Prevention
  • Acknowledged Rape Victims
  • Unacknowledged Rape Victims
  • Self-Report Survey
  • Assault Response Strategies
  • Situational Variables
  • Passive Emotions
  • Internalizing Emotions
  • Perceived Violence
  • Active Response Strategies
  • Running Away
  • Screaming
  • Stranger Rape
  • Victim Perspective
  • Methodological Limitations
  • Rape Conceptualization
  • Victimization Research
  • Sexual Violence Prevention
  • Sexual Assault
  • Sexual Coercion
  • Sexual Violence
  • Non-Consensual Acts
  • Consent Violation
  • Power Dynamics
  • BDSM
  • Rape Culture
  • Trauma Recovery
  • Perpetrator Behavior
  • Psychological Impact of Abuse
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Victim Blaming
  • Trauma-Informed Care
  • Sexual Misconduct
  • Intimate Partner Violence
  • Relationship Violence
  • Abuse in Relationships
  • Rape Recovery
  • Victim Support
  • Victim Empowerment
  • Emotional Abuse
  • Coercion in Relationships
  • Non-Consensual BDSM
  • Safe Words
  • Consent Negotiation
  • BDSM Ethics
  • Victim Advocacy
  • Rape Crisis Intervention
  • Abuse Prevention
  • Psychological Trauma
  • Sadism
  • Fantasy
  • Masturbation
  • Mummification

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 10 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 311-320

Published On

December, 1986

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Abstract

To date, research on effective rape avoidance strategies has involved media-recruited, acknowledged rape victims and avoiders, most of whom were assaulted by total strangers. In the present study, rape avoidance research was extended to a sample of acquaintance rape victims and avoiders who were located by a self-report survey that identified women who both do and do not conceptualize their assaults as rape. The study's goal was to determine whether acknowledged rape victims, unacknowledged rape victims, and rape avoiders could be discriminated by situational variables including the response strategies used in the assault. Victims and avoiders were significantly discriminated. Compared to rape victims, avoiders (1) were less likely to have experienced passive or internalizing emotions at the time of the assault, (2) perceived the assault as less violent, and (3) were more likely to have utilized active response strategies (i.e., running away and screaming). The results suggest that the major findings of existing research on stranger rape avoidance are generalizable to acquaintance rape. However, concerns are expressed over methodological limitations of research on rape avoidance from the victim's perspective.

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