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  • adults who are or have been and 26% of men experience at least intimate partners or family one such episode (Gilchrist and

    members, regardless of gender Kebbell 2010)

    or sexuality (Home Office 2005)

    Stalking An intentional pattern of Estimates vary depending on

    unwanted behaviours over time definitions (lifetime prevalence

    towards a person or persons that range between 3–13% for males result in their experiencing fear, and 8–32% for females with

    or behaviours that a reasonable average duration of two years) person would view as fearful or (Ha¨kk¨nen-Nyholm 2010)

    threatening (H¨akka¨nen-Nyholm 2010)

    Rape Intentional penetration of vagina, Large rate of under-reporting anus or mouth with a penis (13,093 cases in 2008); lifetime

    without consent (Sexual prevalence of rape or attempted

    Offences Act 2003) rape for those over 16 (and under

    59) was 1 in 24 women and 1 in 200 men (Stern Review 2010)

    Sexual Murder with an apparent or Difficult to assess numbers because murder admitted sexual motivation typically, if murder committed,

    (Oliver
    et al
    . 2007) albeit with a sexual motive, the

    offender is charged only with the murder (Milsom
    et al
    . 2003)

    These broad definitions imply within them a range of either overlapping or distinctive behaviours which can be further broken down into their constituent elements. Table
    7.2 presents examples from research reporting the discrete behaviours within the broad categories, together with their frequencies of occurrence.

    There is obviously an overlap between sexual harassment and stalking and between stalking and domestic violence as there is between rape and sexual murder. Stealing something from the victim is present in murder, rape and stalking, tearing clothing, use of non-controlling violence and use of weapon characterises both rape and sexual murder. There is also a sexual component to sexual harassment. Berdahl and Aquino (2009) differentiate sexual behaviour from sex-based harassment, i.e. that which is experienced because of one’s gender and takes a non-sexual form such as bullying or being undermined. Sexual harassment can also have a sexual component such as being threatened with a promotion failure if the employee does not give in to a demand for sex.

    Commonalities

    There are several behaviours within these sexual violence offences that are common: notably threats of and actual use of violence; and the sexual content of threatening behaviours. Other behaviours are specific to the type of sexual

    164

    Table 7.2
    Behaviours associated with sub classes of sexual violence

    Sexual harassment
    1,
    2

    Stalking
    3

    Domestic violence
    4

    Rape
    5

    Sexual murder
    6

    Screamed or yelled at 54%

    Threats 80%

    Shouted at 54%

    Vaginal penetration 83%

    Found naked 86%

    Hostile offensive gestures 49%

    Follows 78%

    Criticised 49%

    Impersonal 70%

    Non-controlling violence 75%

    Told offensive jokes 49%

    Telephone calls 76%

    Put down in front of others 31%

    Clothing disturbed 70%

    Multiple wounds 72%

    Made crude offensive sexual

    Confronts 52%

    Restricted socially 28%

    Surprise attack 67%

    Vaginal penetration 59%

    remarks 42%

    Sends letters 46%

    Checked movements 28%

    Displays weapon 52%

    Single wound 57%

    Whistled, hooted at you 46%

    Gains access to victim’s house

    Punched walls, furniture 25%

    Steals 44%

    Control with weapon 45%

    Drew into sexual conversation

    46%

    Shouted at, threatened kids 23%

    No reaction to V resistance 42%

    Weapon found at scene 35%

    41%

    Surveillance 44%

    Pushed grabbed shoved 22%

    Insults 35%

    Fellatio/cunnilingus 35%

    Treated as though not good

    Invites contact 42%

    Threatened you 19%

    Fellatio 35%

    Steal something of value 29%

    enough 41%

    Physical violence 42%

    Threw things at you 19%

    Blindfold 35%

    Forensic awareness 29%

    Controlled non-work time 41%

    Threatens others linked to victim

    Kept short of money 19%

    Controlling violence 32%

    Steal low-value item 24%

    Stared, leered, ogled at 39%

    40%

    Threatened with fist 18%

    Identifies victim 27%

    Anal sex 19%

    Treated you differently because

    Contacts others 40%

    Slapped you 15.5%

    Non-controlling violence 26%

    Took weapon 13%

    of your gender 39%

    Explicit sexual content 32%

    Demanded sex 14%

    Binds 26%

    Ripped clothing 10%

    Made offensive remarks about

    Destroys property 32%

    Forced you to do something 13%

    Demands goods 26%

    Binds 8%

    gender 37%

    Public defamation 28%

    Twisted arm, pulled hair 12%

    Tears clothing 24%

    Blindfolded 5%

    Sworn at 37%

    Sent gifts 28%

    Hit/hurt kids 11%

    Gags 23%

    Talked down to 37%

    Threatens to commit suicide 18%

    Punched you in face 10%

    Verbal violence 23%

    Continued to ask for dates 31%

    Asking personal details 16%

    Punched, kicked body 9%

    Con approach 21%

    Treated unfairly in work

    Researches victim 16%

    Threatened to kill you 9%

    Threaten so as not to report 21%

    assignment 25%

    Drives by 14%

    Choked you 9%

    Implies knowledge of victim 20%

    Unwanted attempts to fondle or

    Reveals knowledge about victim

    Forced you to have sex 9%

    Uses disguise 14%

    kiss you 19.5%

    12%

    Threatened with weapon 8%

    Anal penetration 15%

    Killed 100%

    Touched you in a way that

    Abuses victim’s family 12%

    Used object to hurt you 7%

    Verbal threats 15%

    Raped/sexually assaulted 60%

    made you feel uncomfortable

    Tried to strangle, burn, drown

    Compliments 12%

    19%

    6%

    Apologetic 8%

    Bribed for sexual favours 14%

    Kicked in face 2%

    Offender deterred 8%

    Treating you badly for refusing

    to have sex 10%

    Attempted to have sex with you

    against your will 9%

    Afraid treated poorly if not

    sexually co-operative 9%

    Offered to be sexually co-

    operative 6%

    Killed between 2–8%

    Killed

    Killed 0%

    Raped/sexually assaulted 6%
    7

    Raped/sexually assaulted

    between 1–32%*

    Killed*

    Raped 9%

    Raped/sexually assaulted 100%

    1. Marsh
      et al
      . (2009)

    2. Street
      et al
      . (2007)

    3. Canter and Ioannou (2004)

    4. Bradley
      et al
      . (2002)

    5. Canter and Heritage (1990)

    6. Salfati and Taylor (2006)

    7. Brown
      et al
      . (1995)

    * This is difficult to calculate; approx two women a week are murdered by partners in England and Wales

    violence, thus keeping a partner short of money is particular to domestic violence, treating a person unfairly in a work assignment is particular to sexual harassment, sending unsolicited gifts particular to stalking. Escalation from one category to another in the form of rape or murder is also apparent.

    As well as the behaviours, there are also some other common underlying features of sexual violence. These are:

    1. unacknowledged victimisation;

    2. under-reporting of behaviours;

    3. perceptions of false accusations.

    Unacknowledged victimisation

    In the first instance, victims may not wish to acknowledge their experiences with a given label. Thus Petersen and Muehlenhard (2004) describe several reasons why, in their survey, respondents did not want to acknowledge coerced sex as rapes: unwilling to see oneself as a victim; not wishing to view the perpetrator as a rapist; not having the emotional reactions they perceived to be consistent with rape. Mary Koss refers to this as unacknowledged rape and means the non-labelling of a sexual assault that constitutes rape by virtue of the legal definition but where victims do not choose to do so (Koss 1985). Similar unwillingness to acknowledge behaviours of sexual harassment have also been reported (e.g. Harris and Firestone 2010). They analysed survey responses from the US military where 21 per cent of women and 13 per cent of men had experiences of sexual harassment which they declined to label as such. Fear of being blamed or unwillingness to name a perpetrator were among the reasons suggested for not acknowledging the behaviour as sexual harassment. Muehlenhard and Kimes (1999) report similar labelling problems associated with domestic violence. Jordan’s Chapter
    12 (this volume) discusses at more length problems associated with the unacknowledegment of women’s experiences of sexual violence.

    Under-reporting

    A recent British Crime Survey (Povey
    et al
    . 2009) reports that a significant minority of rape victims had not told anyone about their assault and only a minority had told the police. HMCPSI/HMIC (2002) provide estimates that between 75 per cent and 85 per cent of rape complainants never report their assault to the police. Some of the reasons for not reporting include: loyalty because perpetrator is known to the victim, feelings of embarrassment, fear of further attacks or retaliation, worries about own perceived culpability, perceptions of the police’s treatment of complainants and fear of court proceedings (Kelly
    et al
    . 2005, Helen Jones, Chapter
    8, this volume).

    Harris and Firestone (2010) report from their analysis of sexual harassment

    in the US military under-reporting of complaints often because of myths surrounding the making of a complaint, such as that the complainer will be fired, demoted or transferred. Being labelled a troublemaker was also another reason for not reporting incidents. They also report that people’s beliefs about how seriously a complaint will be taken and the strength of the organisation’s

    response are also factors associated with likelihood of reporting.

    False accusations

    Sheridan and Blaaw (2004) report from the literature that perhaps 2 per cent of stalking accusations are false, although in their own study they found 11.5 per cent. Mullen
    et al
    . (2000) identified five broad classes of false allegation: anger retaliation provoked by the ending of a relationship; delusional associated with severe mental disorder; the previously stalked who misinterpret ordinary behaviours as stalking; factitious victims seeking gratification of dependency needs; and malingerers who intentionally fabricated or exaggerated for external incentives. False accusers’ accounts did differ in important details from authentic stalking victims: false claims were less likely to involve receiving unwanted letters or threats of attacks on third parties. In Sheridan and Blaauw’s study there were no demographic differences distinguishing false from true accusations. Interestingly, genuine victims were twice as likely to report assault.

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