Englebrecht Christine M, Reyns Bradford W
Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA.
Violence Vict. 2011;26(5):560-79. doi: 10.1891/0886-6708.26.5.560.
Research suggests that a significant portion of victims of interpersonal violence do not acknowledge or label their experience as a criminal victimization. Studies exploring unacknowledged victimizations have found that individuals are more likely to acknowledge victimization when the experience meets certain, often stereotypical criteria. This study addressed this issue by integrating literature on victim acknowledgment and stalking victimization to identify correlates of victimization acknowledgment among stalking victims. Data were drawn from the 2006 stalking supplement to the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), and the sample included both female and male victims of stalking. Findings revealed support for a "classic stalking script," which included a reliance on stereotypical types of stalking behavior (i.e., being spied on) that were shown to increase acknowledgment for victims of stalking. Results also described gender based correlates of victimization acknowledgment.
研究表明,人际暴力的很大一部分受害者并不承认或认定自己的经历属于刑事受害情况。探索未被承认的受害情况的研究发现,当经历符合某些通常是刻板的标准时,个人更有可能承认自己是受害者。本研究通过整合关于受害者承认和跟踪骚扰受害情况的文献来解决这一问题,以确定跟踪骚扰受害者中承认受害情况的相关因素。数据取自2006年《国家犯罪受害情况调查》(NCVS)的跟踪骚扰补充调查,样本包括跟踪骚扰的女性和男性受害者。研究结果支持一种“经典跟踪骚扰模式”,其中包括依赖刻板的跟踪骚扰行为类型(如被监视),这些行为被证明会增加跟踪骚扰受害者被承认受害的可能性。研究结果还描述了承认受害情况中的性别相关因素。