NCJ Number: 179977

Title: Extent and Nature of the Sexual Victimization of College Women: A National-Level Analysis
 
Author: Bonnie S. Fisher Ph.D.; Francis T. Cullen Ph.D.; Michael G. Turner M.S.
 
Sponsor: US Dept of Justice National Institute of Justice
 
Sale: National Institute of Justice/NCJRS Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849

National Institute of Justice/NCJRS Paper Reproduction Sales
Box 6000 Department F
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Publication
Date:
1999
 
Pages: 323
 
Type: Studies/research reports
 
Format: Noncommercial publications document
 
Origin: United States
 
Language: English
 
Grant No.: 95-WT-NX-0001
 
Annotation: Building on existing studies, the goal of the current study was to demarcate more clearly than in previous similar studies the dimensions and nature of the sexual victimization of college women.
 
Abstract: The study used a nationally representative sample of college women, assessed a range of potential sexual victimizations, measured sexual victimization by using specifically worded questions, acquired detailed information about each victimization incident, and examined how the risk of being victimized was affected by a range of variables. The latter variables included demographic characteristics, lifestyles or routine activities, and characteristics of the college or university a student attended. Among the study's findings are that during the 6-month reference period, 1.7 percent of the college women sampled reported that they had experienced a completed rape; the corresponding figure for attempted rape was 1.1 percent. Across the 12 types of sexual victimization, 15.5 percent of the women experienced at least one victimization. When analyzed by the presence or absence of force, almost 8 percent of the sample had been sexually victimized in an incident that involved force or the threat of force, and 11 percent were subjected to an unwanted sexual victimization that did not involve the use of force or threat of force. A total of 13.1 percent of the respondents indicated that they had been stalked; the average stalking incident lasted 60 days. Most victims knew the person who sexually victimized them. Most often, women were sexually victimized by a boyfriend/ex-boyfriend, classmate, friend, acquaintance, or coworker. Four factors were statistically significant across the various types of sexual victimization: frequently drinking enough alcohol to get drunk; being unmarried; having been a victim of a sexual assault before the current school year began; and for on-campus victimization, living on campus. 53 tables, 121 references, and appended supplementary data
 
Main Terms: Female victims
 
Index Terms: Sex offenses; Sexual assault victims; Victimization surveys; Campus crime; Victim profiles; Acquaintance rape; NIJ grant related documents




The NIJ Research Review: NCJ Number 179977