How People Disclose Their Experiences Faced By Rape Victims

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Rape victims are also silenced by rape culture by being led to believe that if they do disclose their experiences, they will be blamed, or at least partially blamed, for what happened. Victim blaming is when the victim is seen as inviting or increasing their risk of being victimized, which results in the rapist generally being seen as less culpable, or not fully responsible for their actions (Ward, 1995). This is a major concern as to why victims are unwilling to disclose their experiences, with 31% of women feeling that the assault was their fault and therefore a reason to remain silent (MWA, 2009). There are a number of factors which impact on whether a victim will be seen as partially accountable for their assault, including being in a relationship …show more content…

Her past behavior and reputation was the subject of much discussion (Morris, 2008) and she was questioned extensively about her past sexual history (Boyes, 2006). In fact, part of the evidence was that she had shown one of the accused her stocking (New Zealand Police Association, 2006). The idea that women somehow must be at fault highlights the attitudes of society in privileging males and viewing women as deceptive temptresses. Victim blaming also gives support to the proposition that men cannot resist wanting to have sex and that this is natural, which is an attitude found in rape culture. Rape culture ensures raped women are silent by making them unable to tell their story without being blamed themselves (Gavey, 2005). The fear of being presumed responsible or at fault for another’s actions prevents many women from reporting offences, and the fact that it is women being blamed, rather than the men who offend, shows the unequal power that men have over women in defining experiences. Thus rape culture silences women by endorsing attitudes that paint offender’s actions as natural, and victims as …show more content…

Feminist criminology looks at patriarchy’s role in the criminal justice system to explain sexual inequality (Bradley and Walters, 2005), and court practices are an example of the disempowerment of women to benefit men who commit crime. The law has traditionally been a patriarchal system in New Zealand (Morris, 2008). The court system itself is based on masculine values of competitiveness and cold rationality, which privileges the power of men (Morris, 2008). This reinforces unequal power relationships between men and women, leading to women feeling as if their voices cannot be heard in such a patriarchal system. The way in which the courts deal with rape cases leads to women feeling as if the system has failed them, and research has supported the idea that many individuals are victimized a second time through the court system (Ward, 1995). Fear of going through the court system and experiencing this can cause victims to keep crimes to themselves. Similarly to being blamed for the crime, victims in the Roastbusters case were also fearful of the court process, as well as what would be said about them by peers and the media (Malthus, 2014). Part of the reason that women fear the court process is that undue focus is placed on them as sexual entities, rather than the legal questions (Morris, 2008). Until recently, this was illustrated by the

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