Reactions of Boys and Girls to Sexual Abuse and to Sexual Encounters with Peers

To understand the etiology and consequences of child sexual abuse it is important to study the victims’ subjective reactions to such incidents. Because researchers have not been able to survey children about sexual abuse, not much is known about how subjective reactions are related to gender, age, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of youth and adolescence 2019-10, Vol.48 (10), p.1869-1882
Hauptverfasser: Felson, Richard B., Savolainen, Jukka, Fry, Sarah, Whichard, Corey, Ellonen, Noora
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container_issue 10
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container_title Journal of youth and adolescence
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creator Felson, Richard B.
Savolainen, Jukka
Fry, Sarah
Whichard, Corey
Ellonen, Noora
description To understand the etiology and consequences of child sexual abuse it is important to study the victims’ subjective reactions to such incidents. Because researchers have not been able to survey children about sexual abuse, not much is known about how subjective reactions are related to gender, age, age difference, and the social relationship between the offender and victim. The present study fills this gap using data gathered from a large, nationally representative sample of Finnish children ages 11 to 17 ( N  = 32,145). Analyses of abuse are based on a sample of 1520 children (78% girls), while analyses of peer sexual experiences are based on a sample of 3551 children (55% girls). Multivariate analyses adjusted for the use of coercion, the intimacy of the sexual experience, and other incident characteristics. It was hypothesized that, as a result of sex differences in sexuality and attitudes toward deviant behavior, girls are more sensitive than boys to age and age difference. Three findings supported the hypothesis: (1) girls were more likely than boys to have a negative reaction to sexual encounters regardless of the age difference; (2) for girls, age was negatively associated with the likelihood of a negative reaction, but age had no effect for boys; and (3) girls reacted negatively to age difference while boys did not. However, girls did not react more negatively unless the offender was at least eight years older. The results highlight the susceptibility of adolescent boys to encounters with older women. They further suggest that ignoring the role of the victim limits understanding of the vulnerability of young people to sexual abuse.
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent boys
Age differences
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child
Child Abuse
Child Abuse, Sexual - psychology
Child and School Psychology
Child sexual abuse
Children
Children & youth
Clinical Psychology
Coercion
Crime Victims
Criminals - psychology
Deviance
Empirical Research
Etiology
Female
Females
Gender roles
Girls
Health Psychology
History of Psychology
Humans
Individual Differences
Law and Psychology
Male
Males
Older people
Peer Group
Peers
Psychology
Researcher subject relations
Responses
Sex crimes
Sex differences
Sex Factors
Sexual abuse
Sexual Behavior - psychology
Sexuality
Surveys and Questionnaires
Victim offender relations
Victims
Vulnerability
Youth
title Reactions of Boys and Girls to Sexual Abuse and to Sexual Encounters with Peers
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