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Paper Title

Alcohol and Sexual Assault in a National Sample of College Women

Keywords

  • Alcohol Use
  • Sexual Assault
  • Rape Risk
  • Victimization Severity
  • Offender Alcohol Use
  • Victim Alcohol Use
  • Multivariate Analysis
  • Social Context
  • Behavioral Mechanisms
  • Hierarchical Regression
  • Sexual Experiences Survey (SES)
  • Alcohol Abuse Prevention
  • Rape Prevention
  • Assault Context
  • Rape
  • Sexual Violence
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Consent Violation
  • Sexual Coercion
  • Sexual Harassment
  • Intimate Partner Violence
  • Rape Culture
  • Victim Blaming
  • Survivor Advocacy
  • Sexual Aggression
  • Legal Responses to Sexual Assault
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Non-Consensual Sex
  • Trauma
  • Psychological Impact of Sexual Assault
  • Sexual Assault Laws
  • Rape Recovery
  • Sexual Assault Prevention
  • Victim Support
  • Perpetrator Behavior
  • Consent Education
  • Bystander Intervention
  • Sexual Trauma
  • Sexual Offenders
  • Empowering Survivors
  • Domestic Violence
  • Legal Frameworks for Sexual Assault
  • Gender-Based Violence
  • Sexual Assault Awareness
  • Law Enforcement Response to Sexual Assault
  • Intervention Strategies
  • Restorative Justice in Sexual Assault
  • Consent Negotiation
  • Social Stigma of Sexual Assault
  • Workplace Sexual Assault
  • Sexual Assault Prevention Programs
  • Rape Recovery Support
  • Trauma-Informed Care
  • Victim-Centered Approach

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 14 | Issue : 6 | Page No : 603-625

Published On

June, 1999

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Abstract

Alcohol is associated with risk of sexual assault among women and with increased risk of experiencing completed rape once attacked. In particular, alcohol use prior to sexual assault by both offenders and victims may affect the severity of sexual victimization experienced by women. Little research has explored the mechanisms (e.g., social context, behavior) through which alcohol may affect outcomes of sexual attacks using multivariate analysis. This study analyzed the role of alcohol in sexual assaults experienced by a national sample of female college students. A hierarchical multivariate regression showed that victim alcohol abuse propensity and both victim and offender alcohol use prior to attack were directly associated with more severe sexual victimization to women as measured by the Sexual Experiences Survey. 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.

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