Hamby Sherry, Finkelhor David, Turner Heather
Department of Psychology and Life Paths Research Program, Sewanee, the University of the South, Sewanee, TN 37383, USA.
Crimes Against Children Research Center, University of New Hampshire, USA.
Violence Vict. 2013;28(6):915-39. doi: 10.1891/0886-6708.vv-d-12-00067.
Most interest in violence and gender has focused on certain types of victimization such as sex offenses and relational aggression. This study examined gender patterns across numerous forms of youth victimization. The data are from the National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV), a nationally representative U.S. sample of 4,549 children ages 1 month to 17 years obtained through a telephone survey of caregivers and youth. For 18 of 21 victimization types, male perpetration was significantly more common than female perpetration. Perpetrator-victim patterns revealed that most forms of physical assault and bullying showed a predominantly male-on-male pattern. All forms of sexual assault, plus kidnapping, showed a predominantly male-on-female pattern. Nonphysical maltreatment showed a mixed pattern, with fairly similar rates across all four gender configurations. Many violence types were more severe when perpetrated by males versus females as indicated by higher injury rates and greater victim fear. Higher order analyses by victimization type indicated, among other findings, that victimization types with more stranger perpetrators had more male perpetrators, victimizations with higher percentages of male-on-female and female-on-male incidents were more likely to be sexual offenses, and higher percentages of female-on-female incidents were associated with verbal victimizations. Results also suggest that males are more likely to aggress in more impersonal contexts compared to females. Gender socialization, physical power, and social power appear to intersect in ways that create gendered patterns of violence. These factors, versus a focus on skills deficits, need more attention in prevention and intervention.
对暴力与性别的研究大多聚焦于某些类型的受害情况,如性犯罪和关系型攻击。本研究考察了多种形式的青少年受害情况中的性别模式。数据来自全国儿童暴力暴露调查(NatSCEV),这是一项对美国具有全国代表性的调查,通过对照顾者和青少年进行电话调查,选取了4549名年龄在1个月至17岁的儿童作为样本。在21种受害类型中的18种里,男性实施侵害的情况显著多于女性。侵害者与受害者的模式显示,大多数身体攻击和欺凌形式主要呈现男性对男性的模式。所有形式的性侵犯以及绑架,主要呈现男性对女性的模式。非身体虐待呈现混合模式,在所有四种性别组合中的发生率相当相似。许多暴力类型由男性实施时比由女性实施时更为严重,这体现在更高的受伤率和受害者更大的恐惧上。按受害类型进行的高阶分析表明,除其他发现外,涉及更多陌生侵害者的受害类型有更多男性侵害者,男性对女性和女性对男性事件所占百分比更高的受害情况更有可能是性犯罪,而女性对女性事件所占百分比更高与言语侵害相关。结果还表明,与女性相比,男性在更非个人化的情境中更有可能实施攻击。性别社会化、身体力量和社会力量似乎以某种方式相互交织,从而形成了暴力的性别模式。与关注技能缺陷相比,这些因素在预防和干预中需要更多关注。