Paper Title

The "Unacknowledged" Rape Victim.

Keywords

  • rape victimization
  • unacknowledged rape
  • acknowledged rape
  • sexual violence
  • sexual assault
  • rape perception
  • victim labeling
  • sexual coercion
  • relationship dynamics
  • offender violence
  • emotional impact
  • rape attitudes
  • victim psychology
  • trauma response
  • sexual experiences survey
  • rape myths
  • consent misinterpretation
  • gender-based violence
  • psychological distress
  • coercive control
  • intimate partner violence
  • crime victimization
  • sexual trauma
  • behavioral analysis
  • reporting barriers
  • victim blaming
  • social perceptions
  • post-assault coping
  • law and policy
  • support services
  • aggression
  • dating (social)
  • emotional experience
  • females
  • individual differences
  • interpersonal relationship
  • psychological patterns
  • rape
  • responses
  • responsibility
  • sexuality
  • social attitudes
  • victims of crime

Journal

Education Resources Information Center (ERIC)

Publication Info

| Pages: 1-15

Published On

April, 1980

Downloads

Abstract

Acknowledged rape victims are women who have experienced forced sexual intercourse and view their experience as rape. Unacknowledged rape victims have suffered the same experience but do not view it as rape. Acknowledged (N=39) and unacknowledged (N=29) rape victims completed a sexual experiences interview and a rape attitude survey to determine if differences exist in the rape belief systems of the two groups, and to identify factors involved in the rape labelling process. Unacknowledged victims were more likely than acknowledged victims to have known the man, to have been involved in a romantic relationship, and to have experienced greater prior and immediate sexual intimacy. Unacknowledged victims also received fewer threats of bodily harm, experienced less offender violence, and had less severe emotional reactions to their experience. Unacknowledged victims characterized the man involved more positively and were less offended by his behavior than the acknowledged victims. There were no differences in attitudes between the two groups. Findings suggest that there are important situational differences between the experiences of acknowledged and unacknowledged rape victims, but few, if any, internal differences between the women. (Author/NRB)

View more »