Linthout Leni, Derluyn Ilse, Desombre Caroline, Benbouriche Massil, Keygnaert Ines
Ghent University, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, VIORESC, International Centre for Reproductive Health, CESSMIR, C. Heymanslaan 10, 9000, Ghent, Belgium.
Ghent University, Department of Social Work and Social Pedagogy, CESSMIR, VIORESC , H Dunantlaan 2, 9000, Ghent, Belgium.
Global Health. 2025 Jul 1;21(1):38. doi: 10.1186/s12992-025-01131-6.
Despite increased scholarly attention to sexual violence, victimization among migrant men and boys remains under researched. This study aims to explore 1) migrant men's views on and understandings of sexual victimization, 2) their own experiences with surviving and witnessing sexual violence during their past and ongoing migration journeys and 3) the consequences of such victimization and their coping behaviors.
Participant observation in Brussels (Belgium) and Calais (France) preceded in-depth interviews with 39 migrant men between 16 and 47. Participants varied in age, nationality, educational level and aspired migration projects yet all of them were undocumented. They held varying, yet consistently gendered understandings of sexual violence, depicting women as victims and men as perpetrators. Although they did not explicitly label their own experiences as sexual violence, both direct and indirect forms of it were part of their past and ongoing migration trajectories. Sexual violence had a profound impact on men, inducing shame and challenging their masculine identity. Coping and prevention strategies ranged from normalizing or minimizing the violence and avoidantly forgetting, to protecting one another against future threats.
The results advocate for safe legal migration routes, increased awareness of migrant men's vulnerabilities to sexual violence, and enhanced training and screening of professionals and volunteers working in the field.
尽管学术界对性暴力的关注有所增加,但移民男性和男孩遭受侵害的情况仍未得到充分研究。本研究旨在探讨:1)移民男性对性侵害的看法和理解;2)他们在过去及当前移民过程中遭受和目睹性暴力的经历;3)此类侵害的后果及其应对行为。
在比利时布鲁塞尔和法国加莱进行参与观察后,对39名年龄在16至47岁之间的移民男性进行了深入访谈。参与者在年龄、国籍、教育水平和期望的移民计划方面各不相同,但他们均无合法身份。他们对性暴力有着不同但始终带有性别色彩的理解,将女性视为受害者,男性视为施暴者。尽管他们没有明确将自己的经历称为性暴力,但直接和间接形式的性暴力都是他们过去及当前移民轨迹的一部分。性暴力对男性产生了深远影响,引发羞耻感并挑战他们的男性身份认同。应对和预防策略包括将暴力正常化或最小化、回避性遗忘,以及相互保护以抵御未来威胁。
研究结果呼吁建立安全的合法移民途径,提高对移民男性易遭受性暴力的认识,并加强对该领域专业人员和志愿者的培训与筛查。