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Sexual assault and stranger aggression on a candian university campus

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Abstract

There is a severe lack of knowledge about sexual assault on Canadian college campuses. This exploratory study of 259 Canadian undergraduate women (mostly white, of British or European heritage, with about half from families of total incomes of over Can $50,000) provides evidence that although Canada generally has a lower crime rate than the United States, sexual aggression against women does not seem to be lower. Further, there is an extraordinary victimization rate for the stranger sexual advances that are legal or barely illegal, but which form a major component of women's fear. Most surveyed women have in the past year been victimized by uncomfortable stranger aggression in public places, while approximately one-third of those who date reported at least one episode of physical, verbal, or psychological sexual coercion. Close to 25% of the women said they had sexual intercourse when they did not want to during the past year.

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DeKeseredy, W.S., Schwartz, M.D. & Tait, K. Sexual assault and stranger aggression on a candian university campus. Sex Roles 28, 263–277 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00289885

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