The Importance Of Rape Proclivity

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Bohner, G., Chiroro, P., Jarvis, C. I., & Viki, G. T. (2004). Rape myth acceptance and rape proclivity. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 19(4), 427-442. DOI: 10.1177/0886260503262081 This journal article explained research involving individuals who accept rape myths and their proclivity to rape. Those who believe rape myths to be true are more inclined to rape, according to the findings. This source is helpful in explaining rape myths and in creating a profile of rapists to discuss the forces behind rape. It discusses how rape is about power in describing the mediating factors behind why it is men who mostly rape, due to larger societal structures of male-dominance; it details how rape is about power, not sex, in describing the research. Information from this source was useful for constructing parts of the website. HealthyPlace.com - Trusted Mental Health Information and Support. Web. 11 Apr. 2010. . This website had many definitions covering rape. It gave detailed information about what separates different types of rape apart from each other. Healthyplace.com not only gives general definitions of rape but it also gives legal definitions such as the difference between sexual assault and rape. This website is helpful in showing what legally constitutes a rape and the kind of evidence needed or what kind of defense can be prepared. Kramer, Laura. The Sociology of Gender: A Brief Introduction. 2nd ed. Los Angeles, Calif.: Roxbury, 2005. This book gives a great overview of what rape is and how it affects women. It mentions how rape is a crime of violence and not a crime of passion. It also talks about how women deal with rape and how to help them. It also goes through the politic... ... middle of paper ... ...was very helpful for finding information about rape in general. Yamawaki, N. (2007). Rape perception and the function of ambivalent sexism and gender-role traditionality. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 22(4), 406-423. DOI: 10.1177/088626056297210 This journal article explains how the factors of high ambivalent sexism and high gender-role traditionality play in the perpetration of rape. Those who score high on a scale of ambivalent sexism or more inclined to rape, and those who hold more traditional gender-roles are more inclined to trivialize rape, blame the victim, and excuse the perpetrator. This source was used to explain the societal factors behind rape, where ambivalent sexism and gender-role traditionality combine in a dynamic attitude derived from patriarchy. This article was helpful in addressing patriarchy as the structural force behind rape.

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