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Predictors of Sexual Aggression among a National Sample of Male College Students

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TLDR
An approximately representative national sample of 2,972 male students at 32 U.S. institutions of higher education was surveyed regarding their use of several degrees of verbal coercion and physical force to obtain sexual intimacy with women without consent.
Abstract
An approximately representative national sample of 2,972 male students at 32 U.S. institutions of higher education was surveyed regarding their use of several degrees of verbal coercion and physical force to obtain sexual intimacy with women without consent. The most severe form of sexual aggression each man reported was used to classify him into one of five groups: sexually nonaggressive, sexual coercion, sexual contact, attempted rape, or rape. Respondents also provided data that was grouped into three blocks of variables: early experiences (family violence exposure, childhood sexual abuse, age of sexual initiation), psychological characteristics (MMPI Scale 4, Hostility Toward Women, rape supportive beliefs, gender role orientation), and current behavior (alcohol use, pornography use, male bonding, sexual values and activity, conflict tactics). Data were analysed via blockwise discriminant function analysis. Variables were entered following a suggested development sequence. Specifically, all early experience variables were entered first as a block. Then the entire set of psychological characteristics were entered stepwise followed by all the current behavior variables. Variables from all three blocks entered the model. The classification rates have been discussed and the implications of the analyses for future causal models of male sexual aggression considered. Language: en

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No Safe Haven: Male Violence Against Women at Home, at Work, and in the Community

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Discriminant analysis of risk factors for sexual victimization among a national sample of college women.

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If “Boys Will Be Boys,” Then Girls Will Be Victims? A Meta-Analytic Review of the Research That Relates Masculine Ideology to Sexual Aggression

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis across 11 different measures of masculine ideology was conducted to determine how strongly each index was associated with sexual aggression, including acceptance of aggression against women and negative, hostile beliefs about women.
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Sexual assault and alcohol consumption: what do we know about their relationship and what types of research are still needed?

TL;DR: This review focuses on alcohol-involved sexual assaults, which have a number of personality traits, attitudes, and past experiences that have been systematically linked to sexual assault perpetration, including beliefs about alcohol and heavy drinking.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales

TL;DR: The Conflict Tactics (CT) scales as discussed by the authors measure the use of reasoning, verbal aggression, and violence within the family in intra-family conflict and violence research, and the CT scales are designed for measuring the use qf Reasoning, VerbalAggression, and Violence within families.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural myths and supports for rape.

TL;DR: This article found that acceptance of rape myths can be predicted from attitudes such as sex role stereotyping, adversarial sexual beliefs, sexual conservatism, and acceptance of interpersonal violence, and that younger and better educated people reveal less stereotypic and adversarial, and proviolence attitudes and less rape myth acceptance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Negative and positive components of psychological masculinity and femininity and their relationships to self-reports of neurotic and acting out behaviors.

TL;DR: In both sexes, neuroticism was most highly correlated (in a negative direction) with M+, and acting out behavoir was most strongly correlated with M-.
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