Parent Sylvie, Daigneault Isabelle, Radziszewski Stephanie, Bergeron Manon
Research Chair in Security and Integrity in Sport, Université Laval, Québec City, QC, Canada.
Department of Physical Education, Faculty of Education, Université Laval, Québec City, QC, Canada.
Front Psychol. 2022 Apr 25;13:861676. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.861676. eCollection 2022.
Some studies report that the sport context increases the risk of exposure to sexual violence for athletes. In contrast, others indicate a protective effect of sport participation against sexual violence, particularly among varsity athletes. Studies of sexual violence towards varsity athletes are limited by their failure to include control groups and various known risk factors such as age, graduate level, gender and sexual identity, disability status, international and Indigenous student status, and childhood sexual abuse. The purpose of the present study is to fill in these gaps to determine whether varsity athletes are at greater risk than non-athletes of sexual violence towards them or whether, on the contrary, involvement in a varsity sport is coherent with the Sport Protection Hypothesis. Data for this article come from the ESSIMU study (), a broad survey of students, professors, and other employees at six francophone universities regarding sexual violence on university campuses. A total of 6,485 students with complete data on sexual violence, athlete status, and gender were included in the study. From this total, 267 participants identified themselves as varsity athletes. Data were analyzed using a series of logistic regressions on each form of violence using athlete status as a predictor and characteristics associated with sexual violence victimization or distinguishing between varsity athletes and non-athletes as confounding variables. When considering all confounding variables in the regression analyses on four yearly incidence rates of sexual violence, the results revealed that being a varsity athlete did not significantly increase the risk of exposure to sexual violence at university. All considered other variables were more significant predictors of the past year's risk of sexual violence victimization than athlete status was.
一些研究报告称,体育环境会增加运动员遭受性暴力的风险。相比之下,另一些研究则表明,参与体育运动对性暴力有保护作用,尤其是在大学生运动员中。针对大学生运动员的性暴力研究存在局限性,因为这些研究没有纳入对照组以及各种已知的风险因素,如年龄、研究生水平、性别和性取向、残疾状况、国际学生和原住民学生身份以及童年期性虐待经历。本研究的目的是填补这些空白,以确定大学生运动员遭受性暴力的风险是否高于非运动员,或者相反,参与大学体育运动是否符合体育保护假说。本文的数据来自ESSIMU研究(),这是一项针对六所法语大学的学生、教授和其他员工进行的关于大学校园性暴力的广泛调查。共有6485名学生纳入研究,他们具备关于性暴力、运动员身份和性别的完整数据。其中,267名参与者自称是大学生运动员。数据分析采用一系列逻辑回归,以运动员身份作为预测变量,将与性暴力受害相关的特征或区分大学生运动员和非运动员的特征作为混杂变量,对每种暴力形式进行分析。在对性暴力的四年发生率进行回归分析时,考虑所有混杂变量后,结果显示,成为大学生运动员并不会显著增加在大学遭受性暴力的风险。所有其他考虑变量在预测过去一年性暴力受害风险方面比运动员身份更具显著性。