Back to Top

Paper Title

ALCOHOL AND SEXUAL AGGRESSION IN A NATIONAL SAMPLE OF COLLEGE MEN

Keywords

  • Alcohol And Sexual Aggression
  • College Men
  • Sexual Assault
  • Alcohol Use
  • Offender Alcohol Abuse
  • Victim Alcohol Use
  • Sexual Aggression Severity
  • Path Analysis
  • Social Context
  • Assault Variables
  • Preassault Alcohol Use
  • Synergistic Effects
  • Risk Factors
  • Prevention Efforts
  • Behavioral Pathways
  • National Sample

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 23 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 673-689

Published On

December, 1999

Downloads

Abstract

Alcohol use prior to sexual assault by both offenders and their victims may be associated with the severity of sexual aggression men commit against women. Little research has explored the pathways (e.g., social context, behavior) through which alcohol may affect outcomes of sexual attacks. The present study analyzed the role of alcohol in sexual assaults (N = 694) committed by men identified from a national sample (N = 2,972) of male college students completing a survey. Interactions of alcohol use with assault variables did not suggest any synergistic role of alcohol use in predicting sexual aggression severity. Path analysis showed, however, that offender propensity to abuse alcohol and victim preassault alcohol use were each both directly and indirectly related to sexual aggression severity, whereas offender preassault alcohol use was not directly related to sexual aggression severity. This study suggests that alcohol use plays both direct and indirect roles in the outcomes of sexual assaults. Rape and alcohol abuse prevention efforts can benefit from incorporating information about alcohol's role in different assault contexts.

View more >>