1 School of Social Work, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Trauma Violence Abuse. 2018 Dec;19(5):512-527. doi: 10.1177/1524838016673601. Epub 2016 Nov 1.
Child sexual abuse (CSA), sexual assault (SA), and intimate partner violence (IPV) occur within social contexts that shape how survivors judge themselves and are evaluated by others. Because these are gendered sexual and intimate crimes that violate social norms about what is appropriate and acceptable, survivors may experience stigma that includes victim-blaming messages from the broader society as well as specific stigmatizing reactions from others in response to disclosure; this stigmatization can be internalized among survivors as self-blame, shame, and anticipatory stigma. Stigma and stigmatization play an important role in shaping survivors' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors as they recover; their risk of revictimization; and their help-seeking and attainment process. In this review, we synthesize recent CSA, SA, and IPV research ( N = 123) that examines female survivors' self-blame, shame, internalized stigma, and anticipatory stigma as well as negative social reactions in response to survivors' disclosure. We highlight critical findings as well as implications for research, practice, and policy, and we note gaps in our current knowledge.
儿童性虐待(CSA)、性侵犯(SA)和亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)发生在塑造幸存者自我判断和他人评价的社会环境中。由于这些是性别化的性和亲密犯罪,违反了关于适当和可接受的社会规范,幸存者可能会遭受污名化,包括来自更广泛社会的指责受害者的信息,以及其他人对披露的具体污名化反应;这种污名化可能会被幸存者内化,成为自我指责、羞耻和预期的污名化。污名化和污名化在塑造幸存者的思想、感受和行为方面,在她们的恢复过程中起着重要的作用;她们再次受害的风险;以及她们寻求帮助和获得帮助的过程。在这篇综述中,我们综合了最近关于 CSA、SA 和 IPV 的研究(N=123),这些研究考察了女性幸存者的自责、羞耻、内化的污名化和预期的污名化,以及对幸存者披露的负面社会反应。我们强调了关键的发现,以及对研究、实践和政策的影响,并指出了我们当前知识的差距。