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THE NATION; Cosby's attorney comes out slinging; He tells jurors the woman accusing the comedian of sexual assault is a 'con artist.' King, Laura. Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif. [Los Angeles, Calif]11 Apr 2018: A.5. -
BURSTEIN: Sexual assault must be addressed in high school Burstein, Sarah. University Wire; Carlsbad [Carlsbad]20 Mar 2016. -
ENDING SEX ASSAULTS NOT MERELY CRIME ISSUE: [ALL Edition] Thurs, Maggie. Wisconsin State Journal; Madison, Wis. [Madison, Wis]30 Sep 2002: A8. -
New Efforts to Combat: Sexual Assault on Campus DiMaria, Frank. The Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education; Paramus Vol. 25, Iss. 6, (Dec 22, 2014): 18-20.
Sexual assault vs. "sexual assault": One of the frequent complaints levied against college sexual assault statistics is that they are improbably high, presumably because survey respondents take too broad a view of what counts as "sexual assault." But new survey data from MIT suggest the opposite.
Rampell, Catherine. Weblog post. Washington Post – Blogs, Washington: WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post. Oct 28, 2014.No items selected layer
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Cancel OverlayEnd Turn on search term navigationTurn on search term navigation | Jump to first hitOne of the frequent complaints levied against college sexual assault statistics is that they are improbably high, presumably because survey respondents take too broad a view of what counts as "sexual assault." But new survey data from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology suggest the opposite.
Among undergrads, 17 percent of women at MIT reported experiencing one or more unwanted sexual behaviors involving force, physical threat or incapacitation. (This is about in line with other statistics on sexual assaults at other campuses, though the exact phrasing and definitions used vary from survey to survey.)
But when asked whether they had ever been "sexually assaulted" -- a label with no definition offered -- just 10 percent of female MIT undergrads answered yes.
This suggests that many women (and men; there's a similar discrepancy among men's responses) don't recognize that many of the unwanted sexual behaviors they've experienced meet the definition of "sexual assault."
More on-campus awareness and education efforts, directed at both men and women, about what is and isn't acceptable or legal behavior would help. So would requiring more campuses to conduct surveys like MIT's -- preferably with standardized language and questions across surveys -- as I and others have advocated before. Every time one of these one-off surveys is made public, it is met with disbelief about a campus's crime rates, even though surveys at different schools tend to show similar levels of assaults and attempted assaults. Accusations of "inflated" or exaggerated numbers in turn likely factor into students' willingness to call what happened to them, or to others, a real-life assault.
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Longer documents can take a while to translate. Rather than keep you waiting, we have only translated the first few paragraphs. Click the button below if you want to translate the rest of the document. Translate AllCopyright WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post Oct 28, 2014