Difference between revisions of "Rape" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Virgil Solis - Tereus Philomela.jpg|thumb|250px|right|''Rape of Philomela by Tereus.'' Engraving by Virgil Solis for Ovid's Metamorphoses Book VI, 519-562. Fol. 80 r, image 6.]]
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'''Rape''' is a form of [[assault]] involving the non-consensual use of the sexual organs of another person's body. The assailant can be of either sex, as can their target.
{| style="float: right; clear: right"
 
| {{Abuse}}
 
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'''Rape''' is the act of forcing [[sexual penetration|penetrative]] [[sexual act]]s, against another's will through violence, force, threat of injury, or other duress, or where the victim is unable to decline, due to the effects of drugs or [[alcohol]]. Rape is generally considered one of the most serious [[sex crime]]s.  
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Rape is generally considered one of the most serious sex [[crime]]s, however it can be very difficult to prosecute. Consent may be absent due to duress arising from the use, or threat, of overwhelming force or violence, or because the subject is incapacitated in some way such as intoxication and/or underage innocence. In some cases coercion might also be used to negate consent. In many of these situations the absence of consent is difficult to prove. Additionally, the victim may feel responsible for what happened, even though it was against their will.
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{{toc}}
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Sex is related to the very purpose of human existence: [[love]], procreation, and [[family]]. Sexuality has social ramifications; therefore most societies set limits, through social [[norm]]s and [[taboo]]s, moral and religious guidelines, and [[law|legal]] constraints on what is permissible sexual behavior. Rape violates the very essence of a person's being, violating their very purpose in the deepest way. Until all human beings learn to respect each other, and to realize the true value of sexual intimacy in its proper context, the terrible crime of rape remains a wound that leaves a scar that never heals, not just on the individual but on humankind as a whole.  
  
The related term '''[[statutory rape]]''' is where a sexual act is automatically considered rape by the [[law]], ''regardless of whether it was coercive or [[informed consent|consensual]]''. Such laws are common. They exist in order to prevent adults from having sex with [[minor]]s, who are more easily influenced and therefore are protected by being automatically deemed unable to give legally effective informed consent. Forcible or non-consensual acts that do not meet the criterion for rape in a jurisdiction (in most cases because they are not penetrative) are often called '''[[sexual assault]]''' instead.
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== Definitions of rape ==
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[[Image:Rape_of_the_Sabine_Women.jpg|thumb|200px|right|[[The Rape of the Sabine Women]], a 1582 sculpture by [[Giambologna]].]]
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There is no universally accepted distinction between '''rape''' and other forms of [[assault]] involving one or both participant's sexual organs. Some criminal codes explicitly consider all kinds of forced sexual activity to be rape, whereas in others only acts involving a coupled [[penis]] and [[vagina]] are included. Some restrict rape only to instances where a woman is forced by a man. Other assaults involving sexual organs in some way may then be grouped under the term [[sexual assault]]. In some jurisdictions rape may also be committed by assailants using objects, rather than their own body parts, against the sexual organs of their target.
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In most jurisdictions the [[crime]] of rape is defined to occur when sexual intercourse takes place (or is attempted) without valid consent of one of the parties involved. It is frequently defined as penetration of the [[anus]] or the vagina by a penis. In some jurisdictions the penetration need not be by penis but can be by other body parts or by objects, or may involve the forcing of a vagina or anus onto a penis by a female assailant. Other jurisdictions expand the definition of rape to include other acts committed using the sexual organs of one or both of the parties, such as [[oral sex|oral copulation]] and [[masturbation]], for example, again enacted without valid consent.
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The lack of valid consent does not necessarily mean that the victim explicitly refused to give consent. Generally, consent is considered invalid if it is obtained from someone who is:
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* Under any kind of duress (force, violence, [[blackmail]])
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* Judgmentally impaired or incapacitated by [[alcohol]] or [[drug]]s (legal or otherwise)
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* Mentally impaired whether by illness or [[developmental disability]]
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* Below the age of consent defined in that jurisdiction
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The Brazilian Penal Code defines rape as unconsensual [[sexual intercourse|vaginal sex]]. Therefore, unlike most of [[Europe]] and the Americas, male rape, [[anal sex|anal rape]], and [[oral sex|oral rape]] are not considered to be rape crimes. Instead, such an act is a "violent attempt against someone's modesty" ("Atentado violento ao pudor"). The penalty, however, is the same.
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In [[Pakistan]], under the [[Hudood Ordinance]] in force from 1979 to 2006, the definition of rape required a woman to have supporting evidence from four male eye-witnesses. The sexual act was otherwise considered [[adultery]].
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The definition used by the International Criminal Tribunal for [[Rwanda]] in its landmark 1998 judgment was "a physical invasion of a sexual nature committed on a person under circumstances which are coercive."<ref>[https://www.icrc.org/customary-ihl/eng/docs/v1_rul_rule93#Fn_17_26 Rule 93. Rape and Other forms of Sexual Violence]. ICRC. Retrieved November 10, 2015. </ref>
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==History of rape==
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[[Image:Guido Reni 055.jpg|right|thumb|left|200 px|"Rape of Europa" by [[Guido Reni]]]]
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The word "rape" originates from the [[Latin]] verb ''rapere'': to seize or take by force. The Latin term for the act of rape itself is ''raptus''. The word originally had no sexual connotation and is still used generically in English. The history of rape, and the alterations of its meaning, is quite complex.
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The concept of rape, both as an [[Kidnapping|abduction]] and in the [[sexual]] sense (not always distinguishable), makes its first appearance in early [[religion|religious]] texts. In [[Greek mythology]], for example, the rape of women, as exemplified by the rape of [[Europa (mythology)|Europa]], and male rape, found in the myth of [[Laius]] and [[Chrysippus (mythology)|Chrysippus]], were mentioned. Different values were ascribed to the two actions. The rape of Europa by [[Zeus]] is represented as an abduction followed by consensual lovemaking, similar perhaps to the rape of [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]] by Zeus, and went unpunished. The rape of Chrysippus by Laius, however, is represented in darker terms, and was known in [[Classical antiquity|antiquity]] as "the crime of Laius," a term which came to be applied to all male rape. It was seen as an example of [[hubris]] in the original sense of the word, namely [[violent]] [[outrage]], and its [[punishment]] was so severe that it destroyed not only Laius himself, but also his son, [[Oedipus]].  
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In most cultures, rape was seen less as a [[crime]] against a particular girl or woman than against the head of the household or against [[chastity]]. As a consequence, the rape of a [[virgin]] was often a more serious crime than of a non-virgin, even a wife or widow, and the rape of a [[prostitution|prostitute]] or other unchaste woman was, in some laws, not a crime because her chastity could not be harmed. Furthermore, the woman's consent was under many legal systems not a defense. In seventeenth century [[France]], even [[marriage]] without parental consent was classified as ''rapt''.<ref>Catherine Orenstein, ''Little Red Riding Hood Uncloaked'' (Basic Books, 2002, ISBN 0465041256), 36 </ref>
  
The word originates from the [[Latin]] verb ''rapere'': to seize or take by force. The Latin term for the act of rape itself is ''raptus.'' The term in its original meaning has no sexual connotation in particular, and is still used in its generic sense in literary English, see [[rape (word)]]
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In some laws the woman might marry the rapist instead of his receiving the legal penalty. This was especially prevalent in laws where the crime of rape did not include, as a necessary part, that it be against the woman's will, thus providing a means for a couple to force their families to permit marriage.
  
== Definitions of rape ==
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===Ancient World===
[[Image:Rape_of_the_Sabine_Women.jpg|thumb|200px|left|[[The Rape of the Sabine Women]], a 1582 sculpture by [[Giambologna]].]]
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[[Image:Tizian 092.jpg|right|thumb|200 px|''[[Sextus Tarquinius|Tarquinius Sextus]] and Lucretia'' by [[Titian]]]]In pagan [[Rome]], it was expected that an honorable woman, being raped, would like [[Lucretia]] remove the stain on her honor by committing [[suicide]]. The failure of [[Christian]] women, having been raped in the [[Sack of Rome (410)]], to kill themselves was commented on by [[paganism|pagans]] with shock and horror; [[Augustine of Hippo|St. Augustine]] dedicated an entire book of ''[[The City of God]]'' to defending these women's honor and [[chastity]]. Early Christianity also maintained, as paganism did not, that [[slavery|slave]] women were entitled to chastity, and that therefore a slave woman could be raped, and honored as [[martyr]]s slave women who resisted their masters.
'''Rape''' is, in most jurisdictions, a crime defined as sexual intercourse or penetration without valid consent by both parties. In some jurisdictions, rape is defined by penetration of the [[anus]] or the vagina by a penis, while in other jurisdictions, the penetration of either the vagina or the anus need not be by a penis, but can be by other objects such as a finger or a hand-held object, or the forcing of a penis into a vagina by a female (male rape). Some jurisdictions expand the definition of rape further to include other sexual acts without valid consent, including [[oral sex|oral copulation]] and [[masturbation]]. The lack of valid consent does not necessarily mean that the victim explicitly refused to give consent; generally, where consent was obtained by physical force, threat of injury, or other duress, or where consent was given by a person whose age was below the [[age of consent]], a person who was intoxicated by drugs or alcohol, or a person who was mentally impaired by illness or [[developmental disability]], the consent is considered invalid. (When the sexual activity involved a person whose age was below the age of consent, the crime defined is often known as "statutory rape," although a number of jurisdictions use terms such as "unlawful sexual intercourse" to avoid the forcible connotation of the word "rape.") In addition to common forms of physical rape, there are also other phenomena that can be classified as rape despite a lack of physical abuse.{{fact}}
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In [[Roman law]], the crime of rape was not defined by the lack of consent of the woman, but by her removal from her family; the change was described by [[William Blackstone]] in his ''Commentaries on the Laws of England'':
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<blockquote>
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The civil law [of Rome] punishes the crime of ravishment with death and confiscation of goods: under which it includes both the offence of forcible abduction, or taking away a woman from her friends, of which we last spoke; and also the present offence of forcibly dishonoring them; either of which, without the other, is in that law, sufficient to constitute a capital crime. Also the stealing away a woman from her parents or guardians, and debauching her, is equally penal by the emperor's edict, whether she consent or is forced: “five volentibus, five nolentibus mulieribus, tale facinus fuerit perpetratum.” And this, in order to take away from women every opportunity of offending in this way; whom the Roman laws suppose never to go astray, without the seduction and arts of the other sex: and therefore, by restraining and making so highly penal the solicitations of the men, they meant to secure effectually the honor of the women...
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But our English law does not entertain quite such sublime ideas of the honor of either sex, as to lay the blame of a mutual fault upon one of the transgressors only: and therefore makes it a necessary ingredient in the crime of rape, that it must be against the woman's will.
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</blockquote>
  
==Rape and human rights==
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Rape, in the course of [[war|warfare]], also dates back to antiquity, ancient enough to have been mentioned in the [[Bible]]. The [[Ancient Greece|Greek]], [[Persian Empire|Persian]], and [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] troops would routinely rape women and boys in the conquered towns. Rape, as an [[adjunct]] to warfare, was prohibited by the [[military]] [[codex|codices]] of [[Richard II of England|Richard II]] and [[Henry V of England|Henry V]] (1385 and 1419 respectively). These laws formed the basis for convicting and executing rapists during the [[Hundred Years' War]] (1337-1453). [[William Shakespeare]] included a rape in his ''Titus Andronicus,'' which gives evidence of a general awareness of the crime's presence throughout history.
Probably for much of human history, rape, violence, and war have often occurred in connection with one another. In the [[twentieth century]], the use of rape as a "weapon of war" has been well documented and addressed by [[NGO]]s as well as the [[United Nations]] [http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/49/a49r205.htm] and national governments. If the victim is under 18 the rapist may be charged with child abuse.
 
  
==Sociobiological analysis of rape==
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===Modern World===
{{main|Sociobiological theories of rape}}
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Many developments in [[law]] took place during the twentieth century. Since the 1970s many changes occurred in the perception of sexual assault due in large part to the [[feminism|feminist]] movement and its public characterization of rape as a crime of power and control rather than purely of sex. Rape as an issue of power is illustrated in [[Harper Lee]]'s novel ''To Kill a Mockingbird'' in which a black man is accused of rape. This was a common occurrence in the ante-bellum American south where white society reacted to the developing empowerment of African-Americans with [[lynching]] and accusations of rape. In some countries the women's liberation movement of the 1970s created the first [[rape crisis center]]s, such as that established by the National Organization for Women (NOW).<ref>[http://www.now.org National Organization for Women (NOW)] Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref> One of the first two rape crisis centers, the DC Rape Crisis Center, opened in 1972, created to promote sensitivity and understanding of rape and its effects on the victim.<ref>[http://dcrcc.org/about-us/vision/ Mission Statement] DC Rape Crisis Center. Retrieved November 10, 2015.</ref>
  
Some animals appear to exhibit behaviors that resemble rape in humans, in particular combining sexual intercourse with violent assault, such as are observed in [[duck]]s, [[geese]], dragonflies, and certain species of [[dolphin]]s.{{fact}} It is difficult to determine to what extent the idea of rape can be extended to intercourse in animal species, as the defining attribute of rape in humans is the lack of [[informed consent]], which is difficult to determine in animals. ''See also: [[Non-human animal sexuality]].''
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On September 2, 1998 the [[United Nations]] [[International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda]] delivered a precedent-setting verdict that made sexual violence a [[war crime]]. This defined rape as an institutionalized weapon of [[war]] and a [[crime]] of [[genocide]]. The first female judge of the tribunal [[Navanethem Pillay]] played a key part in those decisions.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/1998/09/05/opinion/when-rape-becomes-genocide.html When Rape Becomes Genocide]. ''The New York Times'', September 5, 1998. Retrieved November 10, 2015.</ref> This was followed in November 1998 by the decision of the [[International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia]] that acts of rape may constitute [[torture]] under international humanitarian law.<ref>[http://www.icty.org/en/about/tribunal/achievements Achievements]. United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Retrieved November 10, 2015.</ref>
  
Some [[sociobiology|sociobiologists]] argue that our ability to understand rape, and thereby prevent and treat it, is severely compromised because its basis in human [[evolution]] has been ignored.{{fact}} They argue that rape, as a [[reproduction|reproductive]] strategy, is encountered in many instances in the [[animal kingdom]], including among the [[great apes]], and presumably also among early humans. Some studies indicate that it is an evolutionary strategy for certain males who lack the ability to persuade the female by non-violent means to pass on their genes. (Thornhill & Thornhill, [[1983]]).
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== Types of rape ==
[[Camille Paglia]] and some [[sociobiology|sociobiologists]] have argued that victim-blaming should not be totally dismissed in all cases, because some [[sociobiology|sociobiological]] models suggest that it may be [[genetics|genetically]]-inbuilt for a certain proportion of men and women to act in ways that would tend to raise the chances of rape occurring, and that this may be a biological feature of the species. This, however, is a very controversial view.
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There are several types of rape, generally categorized by reference to the situation in which it occurs, the sex or characteristics of the victim, and/or the sex or characteristic of the perpetrator. It is important to note that almost all rape research and reporting to date has been limited to male-female forms of rape. Women can also be charged with rape, however this is usually in situations involving underage males.
  
==The role of control and loss of privacy in rape==
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===Marital Rape===
Rape has been regarded as "a crime of violence and control" since the [[1970s]]. According to psychological analysis literature, "control" is a key feature in most definitions of [[privacy]]:
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Historically, most cultures have had a concept of spouses' conjugal rights to sexual intercourse with each other. However, in the twentieth century this view began to change. In December 1993, the [[United Nations]] High Commissioner for Human Rights published the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, establishing marital rape as a human rights violation.<ref>United Nations General Assemby, Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (December 1993).</ref>
* "Privacy is not the absence of other people from one's presence, but the control over the contact one has with them." (Pedersen, D. 1997).
 
* "Selective control of access to the self." (Margulis, 2003)
 
  
Control is important in providing:
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Many [[United States]] rape statutes formerly precluded the prosecution of spouses, including estranged or even [[Legal separation|legally separated]] couples. Marital rape first became a [[crime]] in the [[United States]] in the state of [[South Dakota]] in 1975.<ref>J. C. Barden, [http://www.nytimes.com/1987/05/13/us/marital-rape-drive-for-tougher-laws-is-pressed.html Marital rape: Drive for tougher laws is pressed], ''The New York Times'' (May 13, 1987). Retrieved April 12, 2011.</ref> In 1993, North Carolina became the last state to remove the spousal exemption.<ref>The National Center for Victims of Crime, [http://www.njep-ipsacourse.org/PDFs/NCVCspousalrapelaws.pdf Spousal Rape Laws: 20 Years Later]. 2004. Retrieved November 10, 2015. </ref>
* what we need for normal psychological functioning;
 
* stable interpersonal relationships; and
 
* personal development. (Pedersen, D. 1997)
 
Violation of privacy or "control" comes in many forms, with sexual assault and the resulting psychological traumas being one of the most explicit forms. Many  victims of sexual assault suffer from eating disorders, such as [[anorexia nervosa]] and [[bulimia]], which also center around control issues. Therefore, some argue that it makes more sense to look at the issue of sexual assault as an invasion of privacy (Mclean, D. 1995):
 
  
<blockquote>The more comfortable a person is with talking about invasion of privacy and in insisting that he or she has privacy that deserves respect, the clearer that person’s understanding of rape will be…</blockquote>
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The marital rape exemption was abolished in England and Wales in 1991 when the [[Judicial Committee of the House of Lords|House of Lords]] decision in ''R v R'' [1991] 1 All ER 759 confirmed that a husband could be guilty of raping his wife under [[common law]] rules. In the 1980s, date or acquaintance rape first gained acknowledgment.
  
Consequently, it is important to be aware of the approach of this subject of rape through the concept of privacy because of the historical background and the need to bypass certain [[Social stigma|stigma]]s.
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===Statutory Rape===
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[[Statutory rape]] refers to a sexual act that is considered rape by the [[law]] regardless of whether it was coercive or [[informed consent|consensual]]. Such laws are common and exist in order to prevent adults from having sex with [[minor]]s who are deemed legally unable to give effective informed consent. Some jurisdictions prefer terms such as "unlawful sexual intercourse" for cases involving a person below the [[age of consent]], to avoid the forcible connotation of the word.
  
==References==
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===College campus rape===
<references/>
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[[College]] campuses provide a situation in which rape occurs. The presence of many young men and women, often experiencing their first years away from home together, in an environment where prior controls, supervision, and discipline are to a great extent removed may lead to problems. Youths are in a position to engage in adult behavior with some anticipating new activities and freedoms, whilst others are left more vulnerable.
  
==See also==
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In the [[United States]], students are allegedly most vulnerable to rape during the first few weeks of the [[freshman]] and [[sophomore]] years. According to the [[United States Justice Department]], 3.8 percent of college women and 1.7 percent of men were victims of completed rape within a six month period, and in 90 percent of the cases the attacker was known to the victim. In a typical college career, one-fifth to one-fourth were victims of attempted or completed rape. According to one 1992 study, one out of 12 college aged men and one in every 20 college aged women committed rape, making each responsible for an average of three rapes.<ref>Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues, 1992</ref>
* [[Aggression]]
 
* [[Anti-rape female condom]]
 
* [[Causes of rape]]
 
* [[Child molestation]]
 
* [[Clergy abuse]]
 
* [[Effects of rape and aftermath]]
 
* [[Gendercide]]
 
* [[History of rape]]
 
* [[Incest]]
 
* [[Laws about rape]]
 
* [[Quotes relating to rape]]
 
* [[Rape on college campuses]]
 
* [[Rape culture]]
 
* [[Rape by gender]]
 
* [[Rape pornography]]
 
* [[Rape and punishment]]
 
* [[Rape reporting]]
 
* [[Rape (word)]]
 
* [[Rapists]]
 
* [[Sexual assault]]
 
* [[Sexual harassment]]
 
* [[Sydney gang rapes]]
 
* [[Trafficking in human beings]]
 
* [[Violence against women]]
 
* [[Violence against men]]
 
* [[Types of rape]]
 
  
==Case of Rape with Media Attention==
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The Department of Justice study also found that in "about half of the incidents categorized as completed rapes, the women or man did not consider the incident to be a rape." According to the ''Journal of Counseling and Development'', women aged 16&ndash;24 are at the highest risk of sexual assault. One study concluded that as many as one in four college aged females has been a victim of either rape or attempted rape.<ref>David G. Curtis, [http://www.aaets.org/arts/art13.htm Perspectives on Acquaintance Rape] 1997 by The American Academy of Experts in Traumatic Stress. Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref>
* [[2006 Duke University lacrosse team scandal]]
 
* There is an ongoing problem with [[sexual assault in the U.S. military]] which has resulted in a series of scandals that have received extensive media coverage.
 
** [[Tailhook scandal]]
 
** [http://www.now.org/press/11-96/11-14-96.html Assaults on trainees at Aberdeen, MD, 1996]
 
** [[Air Force Academy sexual assault scandal]]
 
  
==Further reading==
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==Rationale==
===Academic and reference books===
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Many explanations have been developed for why people commit rape. There are theories ranging from the developmental to the ideological; sociobiological theories also have been proposed.  
'''Reference books'''
 
<div class="references-small">
 
* Smith, M. D. (2004). ''Encyclopedia of Rape.'' USA: Greenwood Press.
 
* Macdonals, John (1993). ''World Book Encyclopedia.'' United States of America: World Book Inc.
 
* Kahn, Ada. (1992). ''The A-Z of women's sexuality : a concise encyclopedia.'' Alameda, Calif.: Hunter House.
 
* ''The Columbia encyclopedia''. Sixth edition, 2001-04.
 
* Leonard, Arthur S. (1993). ''Sexuality and the law : an encyclopedia of major legal cases''. New York : Garland Pub
 
* Kazdin, Alan E. (2000). ''Encyclopedia of psychology.'' Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association ; Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press
 
* Sedney, Mary Anne, "rape (crime)." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. Scholastic Library Publishing, 2006 <http://gme.grolier.com>
 
* Kittleson, M., Harper, J., & Hilgenkamp, K. (2005). ''The Truth About Rape''. USA: Facts on File
 
* Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture (2004) ''Rape as a Method of Torture'' Edited by Dr Michael Peel
 
'''Secondary victimization and victim blame'''
 
* Lamb, Sharon, ''The Trouble with Blame: Victims, Perpetrators and Responsibility'', Harvard Univ Press, 1999.
 
* Madigan, L. and Gamble, N. (1991). ''The Second Rape: Society's Continued Betrayal of the Victim''. New York: Lexington Books.
 
* Murray JD, Spadafore JA, McIntosh WD. (2005) ''Belief in a just world and social perception: evidence for automatic activation''. J Soc Psychol. Feb;145(1):35-47.
 
* Frese, B., Moya, M., & Megius, J. L. (2004). ''Social Perception of Rape: How Rape Myth Acceptance Modulates the Influence of Situational Factors''. Journal-of-Interpersonal-Violence, 19(2), 143-161.
 
* Pauwels, B. (2002). ''Blaming the victim of rape: The culpable control model perspective.'' Dissertation-Abstracts-International:-Section-B:-The-Sciences-and-Engineering, 63(5-B)
 
* Blumberg, M. & Lester, D. (1991). ''High school and college students' attitudes toward rape.'' Adolescence, 26(103), 727-729.
 
* Shaver, . (2002). ''Attribution of rape blame as a function of victim gender and sexuality, and perceived similarity to the victim.'' Journal of Homosexuality, 43(2)
 
* Anderson , K. J. & Accomando, C. (1999). ''Madcap Misogyny and Romanticized Victim-Blaming: Discourses of Stalking in There's Something About Mary.'' Women & Language, 1, 24-28.
 
* ''The effect of participant sex, victim dress, and traditional attitudes on causal judgments for marital rape victims.'' (Author Abstract). Mark A. Whatley. Journal of Family Violence 20.3 (June 2005): p191(10).
 
* Kay, Aaron C., Jost, John T. & Young, Sean (2005) ''Victim Derogation and Victim Enhancement as Alternate Routes to System Justification''. Psychological Science 16 (3), 240-246.
 
*
 
'''Self blame'''
 
* Tangney, June Price and Dearing, Ronda L., ''Shame and Guilt'', The Guilford Press, 2002
 
* Matsushita-Arao, Yoshiko. (1997). ''Self-blame and depression among forcible rape survivors''. Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering. 57(9-B). pp. 5925.
 
* Branscombe, Nyla R.; Wohl, Michael J. A.; Owen, Susan; Allison, Julie A.; N'gbala, Ahogni. (2003). ''Counterfactual Thinking, Blame Assignment, and Well-Being in Rape Victims.'' Basic & Applied Social Psychology, 25 (4). p265, 9p.
 
* Frazier, Patricia A.; Mortensen, Heather; Steward, Jason. (2005). ''Coping Strategies as Mediators of the Relations Among Perceived Control and Distress in Sexual Assault Survivors.'' Journal of Counseling Psychology, Jul2005, Vol. 52 Issue 3, p267-278
 
  
'''Causes of multiple victimization'''
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===Developmental===
* Follette et. al., (1996). ''Cumulative trauma: the impact of child sexual abuse, adult sexual assault, and spouse abuse''. J Trauma Stress.9(1):25-35.
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Developmental theories include the idea that someone who grows up in a [[family]] and social environment in which other people are regarded as of no value may fail to develop [[empathy]], and view the abuse of others' bodies as normal. Exposure to [[pornography]] has also been suggested to have this effect. An unresolved childhood incident may fester into a profound hatred of one sex and this hatred may manifest itself in violent assault in adulthood. Others suggest overactive sex drives compel people to commit rape. Still others blame male propensity for violence, although this view is refuted by the existence of rape by females.
* Sarkar, N. N.; Sarkar, Rina, (2005). ''Sexual Assault on a Woman: Its Impact on Her Life and Living in Society.'' Sexual & Relationship Therapy. 20 (4), 407-419
 
* Parillo, K., Robert C. Freeman, & Paul Young. (2003) ''Association Between Child Sexual Abuse and Sexual Revictimization in Adulthood Among Women Sex Partners of Injection Drug Users''. Violence and Victims. 18(4): 473-484.  
 
* Shields, N. & Hanneke, C. (1988). ''Multiple Sexual Victimization: The Case of Incest and Marital Rape''. In G. Hotaling, D. Finkelhor, J. Kirkpatrick, & M. Strauss (Eds), Family abuse and its consequences: New directions in research. (pp. 255-269). Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
 
* Sorenson SB, Siegel JM, Golding JM, Stein JA. (1991). Repeated sexual victimization.
 
Violence Vict. Winter;6(4):299-308.
 
  
'''Male victims'''
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===Ideological===
* Dorais, Michel, ''Don't Tell: The Sexual Abuse of Boys'', McGill-Queen Univ Press, 2002.  
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The belief that some people (usually women) do not have the right to occupy certain positions may prompt some men to commit assaults intended to punish the perceived trespass: the target will have "asked" for the assault they get. Sex with junior colleagues may be seen as a prerogative of office. The junior may feel unable to respond for fear of being fired.
* Mezey, Gillian, and King, Michael, ''Male Victims of Sexual Assault'', Oxford, 2000.
 
  
'''Theories'''
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In mens' [[prison]]s assaulting others may seem the only way to prevent oneself being so-treated, or as a way to acquire status in a limited environment.  
* Anderson, Peter and Struckman-Johnson Cindy, ''Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies'', Guilford, 1998.
 
* Harris, Grant, et al, ''The Causes of Rape: Understanding Individual Differences in Male Propensity for Sexual Aggression'', American Psychological Association, 2005.
 
* "''Psychosexual Disorders''." Section 15, Chapter 192 in The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy , edited by Mark H. Beers, MD, and Robert Berkow, MD. Whitehouse Station, NJ: Merck Research Laboratories, 2002.
 
* [[Susan Brownmiller|Brownmiller, Susan]]: ''Against Our Will : Men, Women, and Rape'', Ballantine Books, 1975.
 
* Gavey, Nicola, ''Just Sex: The Cultural Scaffolding of Rape'', Routledge, 2005.
 
* Scruton, Roger, ''Sexual Desire: A Moral Philoshopy of the Erotic'', Free, 1986.
 
* Ellis, Lee, ''Theories of Rape: Inquiries Into the Causes of Rape'', Hemisphere, 1989.
 
* McDonald, John, ''Rape: Controversial Issues: Criminal Profiles, Date Rape, False Reports, and False Memories'', Charles C Thomas, 1995.
 
* Cothran, Helen, ''Sexual Violence: Opposing Viewpoints'', Thompson Gale, 2003.
 
* Holmes, Ronald and Steven, ''Current Perspectives on Sex Crimes'', Sage, 2002.
 
* Emilie Buchwald, Pamela Fletcher, Martha Roth (ed.), ''Transforming a Rape Culture'', Milkweed Editions, 2005.
 
* Kanin, Eugene J. (1994). False Rape Allegations. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior.''
 
*Sarah Projansky, ''Watching Rape: Film and Television in Postfeminist Culture'', New York University Press 2001
 
* Thornhill, Randy and Palmer, Craig T. ''A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion''. MIT Press, 2001.
 
* Roussel, D.E. and R. Bolen. (2000). ''The Epidemic of Rape and Child Sexual Abuse in the United States.'' Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
 
* Mclean, D. (1995). ''Privacy and its invasion.'' CT: Praeger.
 
* Margulis, Stephen T., (2003). Privacy as a social issue and behavioral concept. ''Journal of social issues'' 59(2):243-261
 
* Pedersen, DM (1997) Psychological functions of privacy. ''Journal Of Environmental Psychology'', 17:147-156
 
  
'''Child rape and child sexual assault'''
+
The opportunity to rape may co-exist alongside the near certainty of getting away with it. This may apply within a family where even if a child complains they are likely to be disbelieved, particularly if their abuser is an adult of good standing within their community.
* Levesque, Roger, ''Sexual Abuse of Children'', Indiana Univ Press, 1999.
 
* Pryor, Douglass, W. ''Unspeakable Acts: Why Men Sexually Abuse Children'', New York University Press, 1996.
 
  
'''Female Sex Offenders'''
+
===Sociobiological===
* Pearson, Patricia, ''When She Was Bad: Violent Women and the Myth of Innocence'', Viking Adult, 1997.
 
* Adams, Ken, ''Silently Seduced: When Parents Make their Children Partners-Understanding Covert Incest'', HCI, 1991.
 
* Anderson, Peter B., and Struckman-Johnson Cindy, ''Sexually Aggressive Women: Current Perspectives and Controversies'', Guilford, 1998.
 
* Kierski, Werner, ''Female Violence: Can We Therapists Face Up to it?'', Counseling and Psychotherapy Journal, 12/2002.
 
* Rosencrans, Bobbie, ''The Last Secret: Daughters Sexually Abused by Mothers'', Safer Society, 1997.
 
* Miletski, Hani, ''Mother-Son Incest: The Unthinkable Broken Taboo'', Safer Society, 1999.
 
* Elliot, Michelle, ''Female Sexual Abuse of Children'', Guilford, 1994
 
* Hislop, Julia, ''Female Sex Offenders: What Therapists, Law Enforcement and Child Protective Services Need to Know'', Issues Press, 2001.
 
  
'''Non-human rape'''
+
Some argue that rape, as a [[reproduction|reproductive]] strategy, is encountered in many instances in the [[animal]] kingdom (such as [[duck]]s, [[geese]], and certain [[dolphin]] species).<ref>P. A. Gowaty and N. Buschhaus, "Functions of aggressive and forced copulations in birds: female resistance and the CODE hypothesis," ''American Zoologist'' (1997)</ref> It is difficult to determine what constitutes rape among animals, as the lack of [[informed consent]] defines rape amongst humans.
* Gowaty, P.A. and N. Buschhaus. (1997). Functions of aggressive and forced copulations in birds: female resistance and the CODE hypothesis. ''American Zoologist'' (in press)
 
  
'''Marital/Intimate Partner Rape'''
+
Some [[sociobiology|sociobiologists]] argue that our ability to understand rape, and thereby prevent it, is severely compromised because its basis in human [[evolution]] has been ignored.<ref>R. Thornhill and C. T. Palmer, ''A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion'' (MIT Press, 2000 ISBN 978-0262201254).</ref> Some studies indicate that it is an evolutionary strategy for certain males who lack the ability to persuade the female by non-violent means to pass on their genes.<ref>R. Thornhill and N. W. Thornhill, "Human rape: an evolutionary analysis," ''Ethology and Sociobiology'' (1983).</ref>
* Easteal, P, and McOrmond-Plummer, L, ''Real Rape, Real Pain: Help for Women Sexually Assaulted by Male Partners'', Hybrid Publishers, 2006.
 
* Russell, Diana E.H., ''Rape in Marriage'', MacMillan Publishing Company, 1990.
 
* Bergen, Raquel K., ''Wife Rape: Understanding the Response of Survivors and Service Providers'', Sage Publications Inc., 1996.
 
* Finkelhor, D. and Yllo, K., ''License to Rape: Sexual Abuse of Wives'', The Free Press, 1985.
 
* Hall, R., James, S. and Kertesz, J., ''The Rapist Who Pays the Rent'' Women Against Rape, UK.
 
  
'''Male Sexual Offenders'''
+
[[Camille Paglia]] has argued that the victim-blaming intuition may have a non-psychological component in some cases, because a few sociobiological models suggest that it may be [[genetics|genetically]]-ingrained for certain men and women to allow themselves to be more vulnerable to rape, and that this may be a biological feature of members of the species.<ref>Camille Paglia, ''Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence From Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson'' (Yale University Press, 2001, ISBN 9780300091274).</ref>
* Shapcott, David, ''The Face of the Rapist'', Penguin Books, Auckland, 1988.
 
* Groth, Nicholas A., ''Men Who Rape: The Psychology of the offender'', Plenum Press, New York, 1979.
 
</div>
 
  
===Others===
+
== Effects of rape ==
* McElroy, Wendy, ''Sexual Correctness: The Gender-Feminist Attack on Women'', McFarland, 2001.
 
* Gavin de Becker. ''The Gift of Fear.'' ISBN 0-440-22619-8 , (recognising and handling dangerous people and situations)
 
* Doe, Jane. ''The Real Story of Jane Doe.'' Toronto: Random House, 2003.
 
* Ghiglieri, Michael P. (1999). ''The Dark Side of Man: Tracing the Origins of Violence.'' USA: Perseus Books.
 
*Kipnes, Laura, "The Female Thing: Dirt, Sex, Envy, Vulnerability", ISBN 0-375-42417-2
 
* [[Alice Sebold]] ''Lucky: A Memoir'' ([2002]) ISBN 0-316-09619-9 (author recounts her own rape at the age of 18)
 
  
== External links ==
+
After being raped it is common for the victim to experience intense, and sometimes unpredictable, [[emotion]]s, and they may find it hard to deal with their memories of the event. Victims can be severely traumatized by the assault and may have difficulty functioning as well as they had been used to prior to the assault, with disruption of concentration, sleeping patterns, and eating habits, for example. They may feel jumpy or be on edge. In the month(s) immediately following the assault these problems may be severe and very upsetting and may prevent the victim from revealing their ordeal to friends or [[family]], or seeking [[police]] or medical assistance. This may result in Acute Stress Disorder. Symptoms of this are:
{{cleanup-spam}}
+
*feeling numb and detached, like being in a daze or a dream, or feeling that the world is strange and unreal
===Research resources on sexual assault and rape ===
+
*difficulty remembering important parts of the assault
* [http://www.aardvarc.org/rape/about.shtml AARDVARC: An Abuse, Rape, and Domestic Violence Aid and Resource Collection - includes male survivor information]
+
*reliving the assault through repeated thoughts, memories, or nightmares
* [http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches.html Dispatches from the Front Lines- current events articles]
+
*avoidance of things—places, thoughts, feelings—that remind the victim of the assault
* [http://www.theawarenesscenter.org/HistoryChildAbuse.html History of Child Abuse, Neglect and Sexual Abuse/Assault Laws]
+
*anxiety or increased arousal (difficulty sleeping or concentrating)
* [http://www.theawarenesscenter.org/ The Awareness Center, Inc. (''Jewish Coalition Against Sexual Abuse/Assault'')]
+
*avoidance of social life or place of rape
* [http://www.malesurvivor.org/ Male Survivor: Overcoming Sexual Victimization of Boys and Men]
 
* [http://www.menweb.org/sexabupg.htm MenWeb: Male Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse]
 
* [http://www.ncjrs.gov/abstractdb/search.asp National Criminal Justice Reference Service article database]
 
* [http://www.rainn.org RAINN - The Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network]
 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/ Rape Crisis Information Pathfinder - Find journal articles, statistics and online resources on rape and sexual assault. Includes male survivor information]
 
* [http://www.sori.co.uk/ Sexual Offences Research Initiative]
 
* [http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/svfacts.htm Sexual Violence Facts from the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control]
 
* [http://www.svri.org/ Sexual Violence Research Initiative]\
 
* [http://www.snapnetwork.org/ SNAP (''Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests'')]
 
* [http://de.geocities.com/history_guide/horb/index.html The History of Rape: A Bibliography]
 
  
 +
Another problem, referred to as "second victimization," has to do with the caustic and interrogatory way the police and medical staff sometimes treat people who allege rape or sexual assault. Being treated in a harsh way by those in authority to whom the victim turned to for help after the trauma of rape can be experienced in a highly threatening and devaluing manner, exacerbating their emotional distress.
  
Statistics on sexual violence and reporting
+
===Acute and Reorganization Phases===
 +
In 1972, Ann Wolbert Burgess and Lynda Lytle Holstrom embarked on a study of the psychological effects of rape. They interviewed and counseled rape victims at the emergency room of [[Boston City Hospital]] and observed a pattern of reactions which they named [[Rape Trauma Syndrome]].<ref>A. Burgess and L. Holmstrom, "Rape Trauma Syndrome," ''American Journal of Psychiatry'' (1974).</ref> They defined this as having two components which they called the "Acute" and "Reorganization" phases.
  
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//stats.html Rape and Sexual Assault Statistics from Government Sources]
+
During the Acute Phase the survivor may experience shock and disbelief, or feel frozen, and may attempt to disconnect themselves from "the person who was raped." They may feel humiliated, confused, dirty, ashamed, or at fault for the assault, particularly if the assailant was an acquaintance. Extreme nightmares, heightened [[anxiety]], frequent [[flashback]]s, and a strong attempt to disconnect from one's emotions are common, as is [[denial]]—trying to convince oneself that the assault did not actually occur. If raped by an acquaintance the victim may try to protect the perpetrator.
* [http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/ibrs.htm US Department of Justice: Incident-Based Statistics (new, non-uniform and incomplete)]
 
* [http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/ucr.htm FBI's Uniform Crime Reports (non-uniform sources and discriminates against male rape victims)]
 
* [http://www.ncpa.org/studies/s229/s229.html Probability statistics compiled by NCPA from US Department of Justice statistics]
 
* [http://www.spr.org/en/sprnews/2002/110402.html Group Says FBI Report Overlooks Prison Rape Statistics]
 
* [http://www.quadrant.org.au/php/article_view.php?article_id=315 Child Sexual Abuse, Real and Unreal]
 
* [http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/db/issues/99/12.03/view.schwartz.html Issues: Statistics are not always accurate or cited properly]
 
* [http://www.junkscience.com/nov98/rape2.htm Rape statistics not crystal clear]
 
  
Definitions of rape and sexual assault
+
Victims may respond to the rape in either an expressive or a controlled way. The expressive way involves obvious outward effects and emotions such as crying, shaking, rage, tenseness, ironic and uncomfortable laughter (part of their denial), and restlessness. The controlled way occurs when the victim appears to be quite calm and rational about the situation, even if facing severe inner turmoil. There is no single response to rape; every individual deals with their intensely traumatic emotions differently.
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//encyclo.html Encyclopedias, Dictionaries and Reference Books on Rape and Sexual Assault]
 
  
Message boards for rape victims
+
After the acute phase, the Reorganization Phase begins and the survivor attempts to recreate the world that they once knew. This stage may last for months or even years following the assault and despite their best efforts this phase is often riddled with feelings of [[guilt]], shame, [[fear]], and [[anxiety]]. Emotions such as [[anger]], anxiety, denial, and loss (of security) surface. Development of an inability to [[trust]] is a frequent consequence of sexual assault. This loss of the fundamental need for security can wreak havoc on the survivor’s life, causing them to feel powerless and not in control of their body. They may feel unsafe, which can cause a heightened state of anxiety as well as difficulty with intimate relationships. Victims may attempt to return to normal social interaction (such as go out to social engagements) and find themselves unable to do so and their attempts to re-establish themselves in relationships may be hindered by a lack of trust.
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//crisiscenters.html#messageboards A directory of message boards for rape survivors]
 
* [http://www.pandys.org Pandora's Aquarium - Message board for victims of sexual assault which has a male survivor forum]
 
* [http://www.aftersilence.org After Silence - Message board for survivors of rape and sexual abuse - now with a forum for male survivors!]
 
* [http://www.beneathmyfacade.com/forums/index.php Beneath My Facade] - a message board for survivors of rape, [[sexual abuse]], [[domestic abuse]] & [[dissociative identity disorder]]
 
* [http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/mensurvivors/ Support group for male survivors from Hope for Healing (a faith based group)]
 
* [http://malesurvivor.org/ Male Survivor has a support board]
 
* [http://www.stigmatized.org Support forum for people conceived by rape]
 
  
Marital/Intimate partner rape links
+
Survivors often isolate themselves from their support network either physically or emotionally. The survivor may feel disconnected from peers as a result of the perceived personal experience. The shattering of trust can adversely affect intimate relationships, as survivors may have a heightened suspicion of others' motives and feelings.  
* [http://www.aphroditewounded.com Aphrodite Wounded]
 
* [http://www.aifs.gov.au/acssa/pubs/issue/i1.html "Just Keeping the Peace" 2004 Study on Intimate Partner Rape]
 
* [http://members.aol.com/ncmdr/ National Clearinghouse on Marital and Date Rape]
 
* [http://www.stopvaw.org/Marital_and_Intimate_Partner_Sexual_Assault. StopVAW Intimate Partner Sexual Assault Page]
 
* [http://www.hiddenhurt.co.uk/Articles/maritalrape.htm Hidden Hurt]
 
*[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8292562&dopt=Abstract For better or worse: the case of marital rape]
 
  
Non-stereotypical sexual assault
+
Sexual assault can affect an individual forever, changing them into someone living in a constant state of turmoil. In extreme cases the outcome may be [[suicide]].<ref>[http://www.giftfromwithin.org/html/journey.html Rape Trauma Syndrome] Gift From Within. Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref>
* [http://www.oprah.com/tows/pastshows/200604/tows_past_20060427.jhtml Oprah: Female teachers, young boys, secret sex at school]
 
* [http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches/disp_9803_a.html Our Endangered Species; A Hard Look at How We Treat Children]
 
* [http://www.reason.com/cy/cy060402.shtml Double Standard: The Bias Against Male Victims of Sexual Abuse]
 
* [http://www.vachss.com/av_dispatches/nyt-11202005.html The Incest Loophole]
 
* [http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-02-11-sex-crime_x.htm Abuse Cases Face Double Standard]
 
* [http://www.canadiancrc.com/female_sexual_predators_awareness.htm Sexual Assault of Children by Females]
 
* [http://www.bullyonline.org/related/family.htm Bullying in the Family]
 
* [http://www.kalimunro.com/ Articles on Sexual Abuse Steoreotypes]
 
  
Female-female rape links
+
===Loss of Control and Privacy===
* [http://www.kalimunro.com/article_sexual_abuse_by_mothers.html Mother-Daughter Sexual Abuse: A Painful Topic]
+
Rape has been regarded as "a crime of violence and control" since the 1970s. Control has been identified as a key component in most definitions of [[privacy]]:
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/lgbtq.html Lesbian Sexual Assault, Rape and LGBTQ Domestic Violence]
+
* "Privacy is not the absence of other people from one's presence, but the control over the contact one has with them."<ref>D. Pedersen, "Psychological functions of privacy," ''Journal of Environmental Psychology'' 17 (1997): 147-156.</ref> 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/lgbtq.html LGBTQ DV hotline is 1-617-423-7233 and the Gay & Lesbian National Hotline is 1-888-THE-GLNH]
+
* "Selective control of access to the self."<ref>S. Margulis, "Privacy as a social issue and behavioral concept," ''Journal of Social Issues'' 59 (2003).</ref>
* [http://www.survivorproject.org/ The Survivor Project]
 
* [http://www.nwnetwork.org/ The Northwest Network]
 
* [http://www.aardvarc.org/dv/gay.shtml Gay resources from aardvarc]
 
* [http://www.healthyplace.com/communities/personality_disorders/pem/pam/female.htm Female-Female Abuse]
 
  
Male-male and female-male rape links
+
Control is important in providing:
* [http://www.oprah.com/tows/pastshows/200604/tows_past_20060427.jhtml Oprah: Female teachers, young boys, secret sex at school]
+
* what we need for normal psychological functioning;
* [http://wcco.com/specialreports/local_story_054152756.html Inside the Mind of a Female Sex Offender]
+
* stable interpersonal relationships; and
* [http://www.menweb.org/scottmom.htm Take Care of Your Mother - Or Else]
+
* personal development.  
* [http://www.menweb.org/scottrev.htm Revenge: A Dish Best Served Cold]
+
Violation of privacy or "control" comes in many forms, with sexual assault and the resulting psychological traumas being one of the most explicit forms. Many victims of sexual assault suffer from eating disorders such as [[anorexia nervosa]] and [[bulimia]], which also center around control issues. Therefore, some argue that it makes more sense to look at the issue of sexual assault as an invasion of privacy. Approaching rape through the concept of privacy also helps bypass certain [[social stigma]]s.
* [http://www.malesurvivor.org/ Male Survivor - Overcoming Sexual Victimization Of Boys and Men]
 
* [http://www.kalimunro.com/article_mother_son_sexual_abuse.html Male Sexual Abuse Victims of Female Perpetrators: Society's Betrayal of Boys]
 
* [http://www.breakingthesilence.com/female.html Female Sexual Offenders]
 
* [http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/psychology/female_offenders/6.html Female Sex Offenders]
 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//male.html Male sexual assault survivors]
 
  
LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer)
+
==Rape in Contemporary Society==
*[http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/lgbtq.html LGBTQ and lesbian sexual assault resources]
+
Rape has come to be universally reviled as an unspeakable offense, at least in theory. It is still sanctioned in many societies as a husband's right or as a weapon of war, though it is not necessarily identified as rape in these situations.
  
Victim blame
+
Many reports suggest that rape statistics are not reliable because some kinds of rape are excluded from official reports, (the [[FBI]]'s definition for example excludes all rapes except forcible rapes of adult females by males), because a significant number of rapes go unreported even when they are included as reportable rapes, and also because a significant number of rapes reported to the [[police]] cannot be verified and possibly did not occur.<ref>Dick Haws, "The Elusive Numbers on False Rape," ''Columbia Journalism Review'' (November/December 1997).</ref>
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//vb.html#pagebegin Victim Blame: A Bibliography]
 
* [http://www.crisiscentersyr.org/mr_smith.html "The Legal Bias Against Rape Victims (The Rape of Mr. Smith)"] - excerpt from an April 1975 [[American Bar Association]] Journal article
 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//sv.html Secondary victimization]
 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//sbh.html Hate crimes against RTS disability]
 
* [http://www.menweb.org/throop/falsereport/kanin.html False Rape Allegations by Dr. Eugene Kanin]
 
* [http://writ.news.findlaw.com/commentary/20030811_spilbor.html Findlaw article on false rape allegations]
 
  
Self blame
+
In the United States, the adjusted per-capita victimization rate of rape has declined from about 2.4 per 1,000 people (age 12 and above) in 1980 to about 0.4 per 1,000 people, a decline of about 85 percent.<ref>Anthony D'Amato, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=913013 Porn Up, Rape Down.] ''Northwestern Public Law Research Paper'' No. 913013. Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref> This decline in rape can be attributed to increased awareness of the effects of rape, further development of women's rights, and improved police tactics such as the use of [[DNA]], which makes apprehending rapists easier, thereby removing the threat to society.
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/selfblameresearch.html Self blame research]
 
  
Politics of rape
+
Controversial issues still exist regarding the definition of rape, particularly the inclusion of male rape victims of both male and female rapists, female-female rape and parental-rape [[incest]] victims, LGBT domestic violence and rape victims, marital rape victims and child sexual abuse victims. Other emerging issues are the concept of victim blame and its causes, male rape survivors, male-male rape, female sexual aggression, new theories of rape and gender, date rape drugs and their effects as well as the psychological effects of rape trauma syndrome. In addition, rape by women is a barely understood phenomenon that is widely denied in most societies and one that usually causes surprise, shock, or utter revulsion.<ref>Myriam S. Denov, ''Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: A Culture of Denial'' (Ashgate Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0754635651)</ref>
* [http://www.wendymcelroy.com/rape.htm The New Mythology of Rape: Politicizing Women's Pain]
 
  
Sexual assault awareness raising for victim's rights
+
===Rape and Religion===
 +
The meaning of rape in holy texts has been debated vigorously, popular [[religion]]s, too, have condemned rape as a [[sin]]. Controversy surrounding [[Christianity]]'s stance on rape centers on a particular passage of [[Deuteronomy]]:
 +
<blockquote>If a man happens to meet a virgin who is not pledged to be married and rapes her and they are discovered, he shall pay the girl's father fifty shekels of silver. He must marry the girl, for he has violated her. He can never divorce her as long as he lives.(Deuteronomy 22:28-29 NIV)</blockquote>
 +
Analysts argue that those who read this passage as condoning rape do so as a result of a misinterpretation of the Bible's original Greek.<ref>[http://www.answering-islam.de/Main/Shamoun/ot_and_rape.htm The Old Testament and Rape] Answering Islam. Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref> [[Islam]] also condemns rape as a violation of both the victim and the victim's [[family]].<ref>Mark Walia, ''A Tale of Two Cultures: Islam and the West'' (Design Publishing, 2012).</ref> A controversial aspect of both the Islamic and Christian condemnation is that some do so because they look at rape as an act of infidelity, which undervalues the effect on the victim.
  
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/invisible.html The Invisible Community]
+
In line with views on [[abortion]], conservative religionists advocate that any child resultant from rape not be aborted, but raised by the victim of the rape (assuming the victim is female). Though the child may face a stigma throughout its life, the traditional religious argument is that the child should not suffer for the crimes of their rapist parent.<ref>[http://www.carm.org/questions/rape.htm What does the Bible say about Rape?] Christian Apologetics & Research Ministry. Retrieved January 30, 2009.</ref> Though historically it was advised that victims of rape commit [[suicide]] because of the disgrace brought to their families, the argument in favor of preserving [[life]] comes into play here and the suggestion of suicide discarded.
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//aware.html Women's week activities - awareness raising]
 
* [http://www.vday.org/ The Vagina Monologues]
 
* [http://www.whiteribbon.ca/ The White Ribbon Campaign]
 
* [http://www.silcom.com/~paladin/madv/stoprape.html Male Responsibility For Rape And Rape Awareness]
 
* [http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:hqTfl23gJ-QJ:www.malesurvivor.org/Survivors/Adult%2520Survivors/Articles/Reversal_of_Fortune.pdf+john+g.+macchietto+sex&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=3 Reversal of Fortune: The Rape of Men By Women]
 
  
Emerging and controversial research topics
+
==Notes==
* [http://www.counselormagazine.com/display_article.asp?aid=Eroticized_Rage.asp Eroticized Rage and Other Sexualized Feelings]
+
<references/>
* [http://www.ageofconsent.com/comments/numberthirtyfive.htm Women Who Rape]
 
* [http://www.kalimunro.com/ Articles on Female Sexual Offenders]
 
* [http://www.movingforward.org/v1n4-cover.html Sibling Sexual Abuse: An Emerging Awareness of an Ignored Childhood Trauma]
 
* [http://www.abc.net.au/centralvic/stories/s907377.htm Drink spiking - a reality or urban myth?]
 
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/ed_and_sa.html Research on the link between eating disorders and sexual assault]
 
  
Drugs and alcohol in rape
+
==References==
*[http://www.nida.nih.gov/infofax/RohypnolGHB.html NIDA InfoFacts: Rohypnol and GHB] - NIDA website.
+
* Buchwald, Emilie. ''Transforming a Rape Culture,'' Milkweed Editions, 2005. ISBN 1571312692
*[http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/201894.pdf NCJRS]
+
* Denov, Myriam S. ''Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: A Culture of Denial''. Ashgate Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0754635651
*[http://criminal.findlaw.com/crimes/a-z/rape.html Findlaw] - intoxication and the legal definition of rape.
+
* Groth, A. Nicholas. ''Men Who Rape: The Psychology of the Offender,'' Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 0738206245
*[http://www.aifs.gov.au/acssa/pubs/briefing/b2.html Beyond 'drink spiking': drug and alcohol facilitated sexual assault], November 2003, Briefing from the [[Australian Institute of Family Studies]]
+
* Lauer, Teresa. ''The Truth About Rape,'' Rape Recovery, 2002. ISBN 0966207815
*[http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/ongoing/daterapep.html DEA]
+
* Ledray, Linda. ''Recovering From Rape,'' Owl Books, 1994. ISBN 0805029281
*[http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/drinkspike-victims-had-one-too-many/2006/06/03/1148956587909.html Drink-spike victims had one too many] Australian study finding the vast majority of "drink spike" victims were actually only heavily intoxicated or under the influence of drugs taken voluntarily (not GHB).
+
* Orenstein, Catherine. ''Little Red Riding Hood Uncloaked: Sex, Morality, and the Evolution of a Fairy Tale,'' Basic Books, 2002. ISBN 0465041256
 +
* Paglia, Camille. ''Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence From Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson'' Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780300091274
 +
* Scarce, Michael. ''Male on Male Rape: The Hidden Toll of Stigma and Shame,'' Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 0738206237
 +
* Sanday, Peggy. ''Fraternity Gang Rape: Sex, Brotherhood, and Privilege on Campus,'' NYU Press, 2007. ISBN 0814740383
 +
* Thornhill, R., and C.T. Palmer. ''A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion'' MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 9780262201254
 +
* Walia, Mark. ''A Tale of Two Cultures: Islam and the West''. Design Publishing, 2012. {{ASIN|B009M5F4YG}}
 +
* Warshaw, Robin. ''I Never Called It Rape: The Ms. Report on Recognizing, Fighting, and Surviving Date and Acquaintance Rape,'' Harper Paperbacks, 1994. ISBN 0060925728
  
Miscellaneous
+
==External links==
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//fpwml.html#cd Cultural Diversity]
+
All links retrieved December 7, 2022.
* [http://www.spr.org/ Stop Prisoner Rape]
+
* [http://www.rainn.org Rape, Abuse, Incest National Network (RAINN)]
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip//policetoolkit.html Police and law enforcement training manuals for sexual assault, rape and domestic violence]
+
* [http://www.aardvarc.org/ An Abuse, Rape and Domestic Violence Aid and Resource Collection]
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/collegerape.html College and fraternity rape]
+
* [http://www.mencanstoprape.org Men Can Stop Rape]
* [http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2003/20030042.htm#aofs British Sexual Offences Act 2003]
+
* [http://www.sacc.to/ Sexual Assault Care Centre Scarborough] – An extensive resource for victims/survivors of rape/sexual assault.
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4532617.stm BBC - Sex trade's reliance on forced labour]
+
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/rcip/ Rape Crisis Information]
  
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{{Credit1|Rape|86641334|}}
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{{Credits|Rape|118230407|History_of_rape|117314200|Rapists|117994467|}}

Latest revision as of 17:22, 16 April 2023


Rape of Philomela by Tereus. Engraving by Virgil Solis for Ovid's Metamorphoses Book VI, 519-562. Fol. 80 r, image 6.

Rape is a form of assault involving the non-consensual use of the sexual organs of another person's body. The assailant can be of either sex, as can their target.

Rape is generally considered one of the most serious sex crimes, however it can be very difficult to prosecute. Consent may be absent due to duress arising from the use, or threat, of overwhelming force or violence, or because the subject is incapacitated in some way such as intoxication and/or underage innocence. In some cases coercion might also be used to negate consent. In many of these situations the absence of consent is difficult to prove. Additionally, the victim may feel responsible for what happened, even though it was against their will.

Sex is related to the very purpose of human existence: love, procreation, and family. Sexuality has social ramifications; therefore most societies set limits, through social norms and taboos, moral and religious guidelines, and legal constraints on what is permissible sexual behavior. Rape violates the very essence of a person's being, violating their very purpose in the deepest way. Until all human beings learn to respect each other, and to realize the true value of sexual intimacy in its proper context, the terrible crime of rape remains a wound that leaves a scar that never heals, not just on the individual but on humankind as a whole.

Definitions of rape

The Rape of the Sabine Women, a 1582 sculpture by Giambologna.

There is no universally accepted distinction between rape and other forms of assault involving one or both participant's sexual organs. Some criminal codes explicitly consider all kinds of forced sexual activity to be rape, whereas in others only acts involving a coupled penis and vagina are included. Some restrict rape only to instances where a woman is forced by a man. Other assaults involving sexual organs in some way may then be grouped under the term sexual assault. In some jurisdictions rape may also be committed by assailants using objects, rather than their own body parts, against the sexual organs of their target.

In most jurisdictions the crime of rape is defined to occur when sexual intercourse takes place (or is attempted) without valid consent of one of the parties involved. It is frequently defined as penetration of the anus or the vagina by a penis. In some jurisdictions the penetration need not be by penis but can be by other body parts or by objects, or may involve the forcing of a vagina or anus onto a penis by a female assailant. Other jurisdictions expand the definition of rape to include other acts committed using the sexual organs of one or both of the parties, such as oral copulation and masturbation, for example, again enacted without valid consent.

The lack of valid consent does not necessarily mean that the victim explicitly refused to give consent. Generally, consent is considered invalid if it is obtained from someone who is:

  • Under any kind of duress (force, violence, blackmail)
  • Judgmentally impaired or incapacitated by alcohol or drugs (legal or otherwise)
  • Mentally impaired whether by illness or developmental disability
  • Below the age of consent defined in that jurisdiction

The Brazilian Penal Code defines rape as unconsensual vaginal sex. Therefore, unlike most of Europe and the Americas, male rape, anal rape, and oral rape are not considered to be rape crimes. Instead, such an act is a "violent attempt against someone's modesty" ("Atentado violento ao pudor"). The penalty, however, is the same.

In Pakistan, under the Hudood Ordinance in force from 1979 to 2006, the definition of rape required a woman to have supporting evidence from four male eye-witnesses. The sexual act was otherwise considered adultery.

The definition used by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in its landmark 1998 judgment was "a physical invasion of a sexual nature committed on a person under circumstances which are coercive."[1]

History of rape

"Rape of Europa" by Guido Reni

The word "rape" originates from the Latin verb rapere: to seize or take by force. The Latin term for the act of rape itself is raptus. The word originally had no sexual connotation and is still used generically in English. The history of rape, and the alterations of its meaning, is quite complex.

The concept of rape, both as an abduction and in the sexual sense (not always distinguishable), makes its first appearance in early religious texts. In Greek mythology, for example, the rape of women, as exemplified by the rape of Europa, and male rape, found in the myth of Laius and Chrysippus, were mentioned. Different values were ascribed to the two actions. The rape of Europa by Zeus is represented as an abduction followed by consensual lovemaking, similar perhaps to the rape of Ganymede by Zeus, and went unpunished. The rape of Chrysippus by Laius, however, is represented in darker terms, and was known in antiquity as "the crime of Laius," a term which came to be applied to all male rape. It was seen as an example of hubris in the original sense of the word, namely violent outrage, and its punishment was so severe that it destroyed not only Laius himself, but also his son, Oedipus.

In most cultures, rape was seen less as a crime against a particular girl or woman than against the head of the household or against chastity. As a consequence, the rape of a virgin was often a more serious crime than of a non-virgin, even a wife or widow, and the rape of a prostitute or other unchaste woman was, in some laws, not a crime because her chastity could not be harmed. Furthermore, the woman's consent was under many legal systems not a defense. In seventeenth century France, even marriage without parental consent was classified as rapt.[2]

In some laws the woman might marry the rapist instead of his receiving the legal penalty. This was especially prevalent in laws where the crime of rape did not include, as a necessary part, that it be against the woman's will, thus providing a means for a couple to force their families to permit marriage.

Ancient World

Tarquinius Sextus and Lucretia by Titian

In pagan Rome, it was expected that an honorable woman, being raped, would like Lucretia remove the stain on her honor by committing suicide. The failure of Christian women, having been raped in the Sack of Rome (410), to kill themselves was commented on by pagans with shock and horror; St. Augustine dedicated an entire book of The City of God to defending these women's honor and chastity. Early Christianity also maintained, as paganism did not, that slave women were entitled to chastity, and that therefore a slave woman could be raped, and honored as martyrs slave women who resisted their masters.

In Roman law, the crime of rape was not defined by the lack of consent of the woman, but by her removal from her family; the change was described by William Blackstone in his Commentaries on the Laws of England:

The civil law [of Rome] punishes the crime of ravishment with death and confiscation of goods: under which it includes both the offence of forcible abduction, or taking away a woman from her friends, of which we last spoke; and also the present offence of forcibly dishonoring them; either of which, without the other, is in that law, sufficient to constitute a capital crime. Also the stealing away a woman from her parents or guardians, and debauching her, is equally penal by the emperor's edict, whether she consent or is forced: “five volentibus, five nolentibus mulieribus, tale facinus fuerit perpetratum.” And this, in order to take away from women every opportunity of offending in this way; whom the Roman laws suppose never to go astray, without the seduction and arts of the other sex: and therefore, by restraining and making so highly penal the solicitations of the men, they meant to secure effectually the honor of the women...

But our English law does not entertain quite such sublime ideas of the honor of either sex, as to lay the blame of a mutual fault upon one of the transgressors only: and therefore makes it a necessary ingredient in the crime of rape, that it must be against the woman's will.

Rape, in the course of warfare, also dates back to antiquity, ancient enough to have been mentioned in the Bible. The Greek, Persian, and Roman troops would routinely rape women and boys in the conquered towns. Rape, as an adjunct to warfare, was prohibited by the military codices of Richard II and Henry V (1385 and 1419 respectively). These laws formed the basis for convicting and executing rapists during the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453). William Shakespeare included a rape in his Titus Andronicus, which gives evidence of a general awareness of the crime's presence throughout history.

Modern World

Many developments in law took place during the twentieth century. Since the 1970s many changes occurred in the perception of sexual assault due in large part to the feminist movement and its public characterization of rape as a crime of power and control rather than purely of sex. Rape as an issue of power is illustrated in Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird in which a black man is accused of rape. This was a common occurrence in the ante-bellum American south where white society reacted to the developing empowerment of African-Americans with lynching and accusations of rape. In some countries the women's liberation movement of the 1970s created the first rape crisis centers, such as that established by the National Organization for Women (NOW).[3] One of the first two rape crisis centers, the DC Rape Crisis Center, opened in 1972, created to promote sensitivity and understanding of rape and its effects on the victim.[4]

On September 2, 1998 the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda delivered a precedent-setting verdict that made sexual violence a war crime. This defined rape as an institutionalized weapon of war and a crime of genocide. The first female judge of the tribunal Navanethem Pillay played a key part in those decisions.[5] This was followed in November 1998 by the decision of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia that acts of rape may constitute torture under international humanitarian law.[6]

Types of rape

There are several types of rape, generally categorized by reference to the situation in which it occurs, the sex or characteristics of the victim, and/or the sex or characteristic of the perpetrator. It is important to note that almost all rape research and reporting to date has been limited to male-female forms of rape. Women can also be charged with rape, however this is usually in situations involving underage males.

Marital Rape

Historically, most cultures have had a concept of spouses' conjugal rights to sexual intercourse with each other. However, in the twentieth century this view began to change. In December 1993, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights published the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, establishing marital rape as a human rights violation.[7]

Many United States rape statutes formerly precluded the prosecution of spouses, including estranged or even legally separated couples. Marital rape first became a crime in the United States in the state of South Dakota in 1975.[8] In 1993, North Carolina became the last state to remove the spousal exemption.[9]

The marital rape exemption was abolished in England and Wales in 1991 when the House of Lords decision in R v R [1991] 1 All ER 759 confirmed that a husband could be guilty of raping his wife under common law rules. In the 1980s, date or acquaintance rape first gained acknowledgment.

Statutory Rape

Statutory rape refers to a sexual act that is considered rape by the law regardless of whether it was coercive or consensual. Such laws are common and exist in order to prevent adults from having sex with minors who are deemed legally unable to give effective informed consent. Some jurisdictions prefer terms such as "unlawful sexual intercourse" for cases involving a person below the age of consent, to avoid the forcible connotation of the word.

College campus rape

College campuses provide a situation in which rape occurs. The presence of many young men and women, often experiencing their first years away from home together, in an environment where prior controls, supervision, and discipline are to a great extent removed may lead to problems. Youths are in a position to engage in adult behavior with some anticipating new activities and freedoms, whilst others are left more vulnerable.

In the United States, students are allegedly most vulnerable to rape during the first few weeks of the freshman and sophomore years. According to the United States Justice Department, 3.8 percent of college women and 1.7 percent of men were victims of completed rape within a six month period, and in 90 percent of the cases the attacker was known to the victim. In a typical college career, one-fifth to one-fourth were victims of attempted or completed rape. According to one 1992 study, one out of 12 college aged men and one in every 20 college aged women committed rape, making each responsible for an average of three rapes.[10]

The Department of Justice study also found that in "about half of the incidents categorized as completed rapes, the women or man did not consider the incident to be a rape." According to the Journal of Counseling and Development, women aged 16–24 are at the highest risk of sexual assault. One study concluded that as many as one in four college aged females has been a victim of either rape or attempted rape.[11]

Rationale

Many explanations have been developed for why people commit rape. There are theories ranging from the developmental to the ideological; sociobiological theories also have been proposed.

Developmental

Developmental theories include the idea that someone who grows up in a family and social environment in which other people are regarded as of no value may fail to develop empathy, and view the abuse of others' bodies as normal. Exposure to pornography has also been suggested to have this effect. An unresolved childhood incident may fester into a profound hatred of one sex and this hatred may manifest itself in violent assault in adulthood. Others suggest overactive sex drives compel people to commit rape. Still others blame male propensity for violence, although this view is refuted by the existence of rape by females.

Ideological

The belief that some people (usually women) do not have the right to occupy certain positions may prompt some men to commit assaults intended to punish the perceived trespass: the target will have "asked" for the assault they get. Sex with junior colleagues may be seen as a prerogative of office. The junior may feel unable to respond for fear of being fired.

In mens' prisons assaulting others may seem the only way to prevent oneself being so-treated, or as a way to acquire status in a limited environment.

The opportunity to rape may co-exist alongside the near certainty of getting away with it. This may apply within a family where even if a child complains they are likely to be disbelieved, particularly if their abuser is an adult of good standing within their community.

Sociobiological

Some argue that rape, as a reproductive strategy, is encountered in many instances in the animal kingdom (such as ducks, geese, and certain dolphin species).[12] It is difficult to determine what constitutes rape among animals, as the lack of informed consent defines rape amongst humans.

Some sociobiologists argue that our ability to understand rape, and thereby prevent it, is severely compromised because its basis in human evolution has been ignored.[13] Some studies indicate that it is an evolutionary strategy for certain males who lack the ability to persuade the female by non-violent means to pass on their genes.[14]

Camille Paglia has argued that the victim-blaming intuition may have a non-psychological component in some cases, because a few sociobiological models suggest that it may be genetically-ingrained for certain men and women to allow themselves to be more vulnerable to rape, and that this may be a biological feature of members of the species.[15]

Effects of rape

After being raped it is common for the victim to experience intense, and sometimes unpredictable, emotions, and they may find it hard to deal with their memories of the event. Victims can be severely traumatized by the assault and may have difficulty functioning as well as they had been used to prior to the assault, with disruption of concentration, sleeping patterns, and eating habits, for example. They may feel jumpy or be on edge. In the month(s) immediately following the assault these problems may be severe and very upsetting and may prevent the victim from revealing their ordeal to friends or family, or seeking police or medical assistance. This may result in Acute Stress Disorder. Symptoms of this are:

  • feeling numb and detached, like being in a daze or a dream, or feeling that the world is strange and unreal
  • difficulty remembering important parts of the assault
  • reliving the assault through repeated thoughts, memories, or nightmares
  • avoidance of things—places, thoughts, feelings—that remind the victim of the assault
  • anxiety or increased arousal (difficulty sleeping or concentrating)
  • avoidance of social life or place of rape

Another problem, referred to as "second victimization," has to do with the caustic and interrogatory way the police and medical staff sometimes treat people who allege rape or sexual assault. Being treated in a harsh way by those in authority to whom the victim turned to for help after the trauma of rape can be experienced in a highly threatening and devaluing manner, exacerbating their emotional distress.

Acute and Reorganization Phases

In 1972, Ann Wolbert Burgess and Lynda Lytle Holstrom embarked on a study of the psychological effects of rape. They interviewed and counseled rape victims at the emergency room of Boston City Hospital and observed a pattern of reactions which they named Rape Trauma Syndrome.[16] They defined this as having two components which they called the "Acute" and "Reorganization" phases.

During the Acute Phase the survivor may experience shock and disbelief, or feel frozen, and may attempt to disconnect themselves from "the person who was raped." They may feel humiliated, confused, dirty, ashamed, or at fault for the assault, particularly if the assailant was an acquaintance. Extreme nightmares, heightened anxiety, frequent flashbacks, and a strong attempt to disconnect from one's emotions are common, as is denial—trying to convince oneself that the assault did not actually occur. If raped by an acquaintance the victim may try to protect the perpetrator.

Victims may respond to the rape in either an expressive or a controlled way. The expressive way involves obvious outward effects and emotions such as crying, shaking, rage, tenseness, ironic and uncomfortable laughter (part of their denial), and restlessness. The controlled way occurs when the victim appears to be quite calm and rational about the situation, even if facing severe inner turmoil. There is no single response to rape; every individual deals with their intensely traumatic emotions differently.

After the acute phase, the Reorganization Phase begins and the survivor attempts to recreate the world that they once knew. This stage may last for months or even years following the assault and despite their best efforts this phase is often riddled with feelings of guilt, shame, fear, and anxiety. Emotions such as anger, anxiety, denial, and loss (of security) surface. Development of an inability to trust is a frequent consequence of sexual assault. This loss of the fundamental need for security can wreak havoc on the survivor’s life, causing them to feel powerless and not in control of their body. They may feel unsafe, which can cause a heightened state of anxiety as well as difficulty with intimate relationships. Victims may attempt to return to normal social interaction (such as go out to social engagements) and find themselves unable to do so and their attempts to re-establish themselves in relationships may be hindered by a lack of trust.

Survivors often isolate themselves from their support network either physically or emotionally. The survivor may feel disconnected from peers as a result of the perceived personal experience. The shattering of trust can adversely affect intimate relationships, as survivors may have a heightened suspicion of others' motives and feelings.

Sexual assault can affect an individual forever, changing them into someone living in a constant state of turmoil. In extreme cases the outcome may be suicide.[17]

Loss of Control and Privacy

Rape has been regarded as "a crime of violence and control" since the 1970s. Control has been identified as a key component in most definitions of privacy:

  • "Privacy is not the absence of other people from one's presence, but the control over the contact one has with them."[18]
  • "Selective control of access to the self."[19]

Control is important in providing:

  • what we need for normal psychological functioning;
  • stable interpersonal relationships; and
  • personal development.

Violation of privacy or "control" comes in many forms, with sexual assault and the resulting psychological traumas being one of the most explicit forms. Many victims of sexual assault suffer from eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia, which also center around control issues. Therefore, some argue that it makes more sense to look at the issue of sexual assault as an invasion of privacy. Approaching rape through the concept of privacy also helps bypass certain social stigmas.

Rape in Contemporary Society

Rape has come to be universally reviled as an unspeakable offense, at least in theory. It is still sanctioned in many societies as a husband's right or as a weapon of war, though it is not necessarily identified as rape in these situations.

Many reports suggest that rape statistics are not reliable because some kinds of rape are excluded from official reports, (the FBI's definition for example excludes all rapes except forcible rapes of adult females by males), because a significant number of rapes go unreported even when they are included as reportable rapes, and also because a significant number of rapes reported to the police cannot be verified and possibly did not occur.[20]

In the United States, the adjusted per-capita victimization rate of rape has declined from about 2.4 per 1,000 people (age 12 and above) in 1980 to about 0.4 per 1,000 people, a decline of about 85 percent.[21] This decline in rape can be attributed to increased awareness of the effects of rape, further development of women's rights, and improved police tactics such as the use of DNA, which makes apprehending rapists easier, thereby removing the threat to society.

Controversial issues still exist regarding the definition of rape, particularly the inclusion of male rape victims of both male and female rapists, female-female rape and parental-rape incest victims, LGBT domestic violence and rape victims, marital rape victims and child sexual abuse victims. Other emerging issues are the concept of victim blame and its causes, male rape survivors, male-male rape, female sexual aggression, new theories of rape and gender, date rape drugs and their effects as well as the psychological effects of rape trauma syndrome. In addition, rape by women is a barely understood phenomenon that is widely denied in most societies and one that usually causes surprise, shock, or utter revulsion.[22]

Rape and Religion

The meaning of rape in holy texts has been debated vigorously, popular religions, too, have condemned rape as a sin. Controversy surrounding Christianity's stance on rape centers on a particular passage of Deuteronomy:

If a man happens to meet a virgin who is not pledged to be married and rapes her and they are discovered, he shall pay the girl's father fifty shekels of silver. He must marry the girl, for he has violated her. He can never divorce her as long as he lives.(Deuteronomy 22:28-29 NIV)

Analysts argue that those who read this passage as condoning rape do so as a result of a misinterpretation of the Bible's original Greek.[23] Islam also condemns rape as a violation of both the victim and the victim's family.[24] A controversial aspect of both the Islamic and Christian condemnation is that some do so because they look at rape as an act of infidelity, which undervalues the effect on the victim.

In line with views on abortion, conservative religionists advocate that any child resultant from rape not be aborted, but raised by the victim of the rape (assuming the victim is female). Though the child may face a stigma throughout its life, the traditional religious argument is that the child should not suffer for the crimes of their rapist parent.[25] Though historically it was advised that victims of rape commit suicide because of the disgrace brought to their families, the argument in favor of preserving life comes into play here and the suggestion of suicide discarded.

Notes

  1. Rule 93. Rape and Other forms of Sexual Violence. ICRC. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  2. Catherine Orenstein, Little Red Riding Hood Uncloaked (Basic Books, 2002, ISBN 0465041256), 36
  3. National Organization for Women (NOW) Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  4. Mission Statement DC Rape Crisis Center. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  5. When Rape Becomes Genocide. The New York Times, September 5, 1998. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  6. Achievements. United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  7. United Nations General Assemby, Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (December 1993).
  8. J. C. Barden, Marital rape: Drive for tougher laws is pressed, The New York Times (May 13, 1987). Retrieved April 12, 2011.
  9. The National Center for Victims of Crime, Spousal Rape Laws: 20 Years Later. 2004. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  10. Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues, 1992
  11. David G. Curtis, Perspectives on Acquaintance Rape 1997 by The American Academy of Experts in Traumatic Stress. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  12. P. A. Gowaty and N. Buschhaus, "Functions of aggressive and forced copulations in birds: female resistance and the CODE hypothesis," American Zoologist (1997)
  13. R. Thornhill and C. T. Palmer, A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion (MIT Press, 2000 ISBN 978-0262201254).
  14. R. Thornhill and N. W. Thornhill, "Human rape: an evolutionary analysis," Ethology and Sociobiology (1983).
  15. Camille Paglia, Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence From Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (Yale University Press, 2001, ISBN 9780300091274).
  16. A. Burgess and L. Holmstrom, "Rape Trauma Syndrome," American Journal of Psychiatry (1974).
  17. Rape Trauma Syndrome Gift From Within. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  18. D. Pedersen, "Psychological functions of privacy," Journal of Environmental Psychology 17 (1997): 147-156.
  19. S. Margulis, "Privacy as a social issue and behavioral concept," Journal of Social Issues 59 (2003).
  20. Dick Haws, "The Elusive Numbers on False Rape," Columbia Journalism Review (November/December 1997).
  21. Anthony D'Amato, Porn Up, Rape Down. Northwestern Public Law Research Paper No. 913013. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  22. Myriam S. Denov, Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: A Culture of Denial (Ashgate Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0754635651)
  23. The Old Testament and Rape Answering Islam. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  24. Mark Walia, A Tale of Two Cultures: Islam and the West (Design Publishing, 2012).
  25. What does the Bible say about Rape? Christian Apologetics & Research Ministry. Retrieved January 30, 2009.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Buchwald, Emilie. Transforming a Rape Culture, Milkweed Editions, 2005. ISBN 1571312692
  • Denov, Myriam S. Perspectives on Female Sex Offending: A Culture of Denial. Ashgate Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0754635651
  • Groth, A. Nicholas. Men Who Rape: The Psychology of the Offender, Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 0738206245
  • Lauer, Teresa. The Truth About Rape, Rape Recovery, 2002. ISBN 0966207815
  • Ledray, Linda. Recovering From Rape, Owl Books, 1994. ISBN 0805029281
  • Orenstein, Catherine. Little Red Riding Hood Uncloaked: Sex, Morality, and the Evolution of a Fairy Tale, Basic Books, 2002. ISBN 0465041256
  • Paglia, Camille. Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence From Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780300091274
  • Scarce, Michael. Male on Male Rape: The Hidden Toll of Stigma and Shame, Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 0738206237
  • Sanday, Peggy. Fraternity Gang Rape: Sex, Brotherhood, and Privilege on Campus, NYU Press, 2007. ISBN 0814740383
  • Thornhill, R., and C.T. Palmer. A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 9780262201254
  • Walia, Mark. A Tale of Two Cultures: Islam and the West. Design Publishing, 2012. ASIN B009M5F4YG
  • Warshaw, Robin. I Never Called It Rape: The Ms. Report on Recognizing, Fighting, and Surviving Date and Acquaintance Rape, Harper Paperbacks, 1994. ISBN 0060925728

External links

All links retrieved December 7, 2022.


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