Zaso Michelle J, Livingston Jennifer A, Shaw Rachael J, Colder Craig R, Read Jennifer P
Department of Psychology, University at Buffalo - The State University of New York, Buffalo, New York, USA.
School of Nursing, University at Buffalo - The State University of New York, Buffalo, New York, USA.
Psychol Violence. 2024 May;14(3):195-206. doi: 10.1037/vio0000507. Epub 2024 Feb 8.
Young adult women naturalistically engage in sexual assault protective behavioral strategies (SA-PBS) in an effort to reduce their risk of sexual assault. Despite well-documented sociocontextual risks for sexual assault, it remains largely unknown whether and how social contexts influence SA-PBS use. The present study characterized relations of women's alcohol use and interpersonal contexts with SA-PBS engagement across social events, framed according to Routine Activity Theory.
Young adult women from a community sample ( = 174) reported their drinking and social events across 27 daily assessments spanning one year. Multilevel latent class analyses examined variability in SA-PBS, and multinomial regression tested associations of contextual risks with SA-PBS engagement.
Results supported three distinct classes of social events characterized by SA-PBS engagement: (1) No or Minimal Use of SA-PBS ("No Use," 26%), (2) No Perceived Reason or Opportunity to Use SA-PBS ("No Reason or Opportunity," 44%), and (3) Any Use of SA-PBS ("Any Use," 30%). Presence of likely offenders (odds ratio [OR] = 4.77, = .004), absence of capable guardianship (OR = 5.91, < .001), and greater other's substance intoxication (OR = 1.46, = .01), as theorized by Routine Activity Theory, increased odds of membership in the "Any Use" relative to "No Use" class. Women's alcohol consumption was not associated with class membership.
Women's perceptions of risk in the social environment relate to their likelihood of engaging in SA-PBS. Findings represent an important step toward understanding the social context's role in sexual assault risk and protection.
年轻成年女性会自然而然地采取性侵犯防护行为策略(SA-PBS),以降低遭受性侵犯的风险。尽管性侵犯存在充分记录的社会背景风险,但社会背景是否以及如何影响SA-PBS的使用在很大程度上仍不为人所知。本研究根据日常活动理论,描述了女性饮酒和人际环境与社交活动中SA-PBS参与之间的关系。
从社区样本中选取的174名年轻成年女性,在为期一年的27次每日评估中报告了她们的饮酒情况和社交活动。多层次潜在类别分析考察了SA-PBS的变异性,多项回归检验了背景风险与SA-PBS参与之间的关联。
结果支持了以SA-PBS参与为特征的三类不同社交活动:(1)不使用或极少使用SA-PBS(“不使用”,26%),(2)未察觉到使用SA-PBS的理由或机会(“无理由或机会”,44%),以及(3)使用任何SA-PBS(“任何使用”,30%)。如日常活动理论所推测的,存在潜在犯罪者(优势比[OR]=4.77,P=.004)、缺乏有能力的监护(OR=5.91,P<.001)以及他人更高的物质中毒程度(OR=1.46,P=.01),增加了相对于“不使用”类别而言属于“任何使用”类别的可能性。女性饮酒与类别归属无关。
女性对社会环境中风险的认知与她们参与SA-PBS的可能性相关。研究结果是朝着理解社会背景在性侵犯风险和保护中的作用迈出的重要一步。