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Question About Rape

ReFLeX

Graduate Poster
Joined
Feb 4, 2005
Messages
1,141
A class of mine covered rape in a recent lecture, where we learned that:
60% of Canadian college-aged males indicated that they would commit sexual assault if they were certain they would not get caught.
http://www.wavaw.ca/informed_stats.php(2)

This is very scary to me. That many? Even with the unsettled issue of what "sexual assault" means, that is an extremely disturbing number.
However. One thing I wonder about is the often-heard explanation that "rape is all about power." Not sex - power. This has always seem far too categorical to me, because not only is there rarely just one motivation behind any action, but the very nature of rape seems inextricable from sexual motivation. Now, I've looked around and found just one actual research paper suggesting the power thesis.
Groth, Burgess, Holmstrom
Accounts from both offenders and victims of what occurs during a rape suggest that issues of power, anger, and sexuality are important in understanding the rapist's behavior. All three issues seem to operate in every rape, but the proportion varies and one issue seems to dominate in each instance. The authors ranked accounts from 133 offenders and 92 victims for the dominant issue and found that the offenses could be categorized as power rape (sexuality used primarily to express power) or anger rape (use of sexuality to express anger). There were no rapes in which sex was the dominant issue; sexuality was always in the service of other, nonsexual needs.
Does anyone else know why this power quote is so widespread? Even the study actually includes anger as a third motivation, so it would seem rape is not just "all about power". And how can drunken teenaged encounters not be about sex at all? That's the number one thing people seem to infer, that it "has nothing to do with sex." Is there any other research?
 
A class of mine covered rape in a recent lecture, where we learned that:
http://www.wavaw.ca/informed_stats.php(2)

This is very scary to me. That many? Even with the unsettled issue of what "sexual assault" means, that is an extremely disturbing number.

I'm not sure about Canada. There are an awful lot of rapes in Canada. Much more than the US per capita. Toronto, which is generally considered a safe city, for example, has more than three times as many rapes per capita than New York. Of the biggest 40 cities in the US, only six have as many rapes per capita. Two of them are in Alaska.

However, I tracked down the sources of one such claim about the US. It was a study done in Gainesville, Florida in the mid-1970s, partly commissioned by Ms. magazine. The study concluded that more than half of college-aged males had engaged in activities that fit "the legal definition" of rape. I can't remember the name of the people who did this study, but I once xeroxed a copy from the University library and kept it around until it fell apart.

"Rape" is a bit of a bugaboo, because at that time, there was no legal definition of rape in Florida. In 1973, Florida introduced a new law about "sexual battery" to remove the sexist connotations and common-law assumptions of the term "rape." So, OK, a bit of poetic license calling it "rape."

So let's see what "sexual battery" means according to Florida law. It's in section 794.011, paragraph h:

(h) "Sexual battery" means oral, anal, or vaginal penetration by, or union with, the sexual organ of another or the anal or vaginal penetration of another by any other object; however, sexual battery does not include an act done for a bona fide medical purpose.

That is the complete definition of "sexual battery" in Florida. Read it three or four times. Most people don't get it the first time.

Yes, it really says this and only this. Every sex act, with the possible exception of kissing, is legally "sexual battery" in Florida. Do your own google search if you don't believe me. You've got the numbers.

One might be surprised that there were so many college students at the time who hadn't gotten any. But I went to a Florida university during that time, and, believe me, the putative effects of the so-called "sexual revolution" were grossly overstated.

All of a sudden the hyper-technical language of fitting "the legal definition" of "rape" makes sense.

Now, I've got a rule. I have a finite lifetime. It takes me time and effort to track down original studies, and it's only because of the accident of being located near a large University library that I can do it at all. For a given widely and smugly promulgated statistic, I look up the best evidence given by those who promulgate this study. In this case, the study is the major one promulgated by American feminists during the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s. If I find evidence that it is this excrementally bogus and mendacious, then I don't have to do it again. From that time on, the onus is on the jumping-up-and-down-and-shrieking people to clean up their act. It's a variant of "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me."

So I'm not going to look up your Canadian study for you. If that's the kind of thing that you like to do, go ahead. For me, one turd in the punchbowl is enough for me to decide that I'm not going to drink the Kool-Aid.
 
"Rape" as defined here includes 'sexual batter', that is, any penetration. Hence, the comparisons may not be quite valid. Also, some countries may be better at encouraging reporting of rape. For example, 'date rape'.

Having said that, it's a crazy time, puberty, literally.
 
So, any penetration is rape. Does that mean anything non-penetrative cannot be rape? Would it fall under the broader "sexual assault", or not count as a crime at all? The Florida law quoted above doesn't address it.

eta: Whoops. First sentence, I mean, as in assault, non-consenting.
 
A few years back debated

There was a case a few years back regarding the definition of "rape". Unfornately, it supported the violator.:mad:
A woman was in her house when a man broke in. He held a knife to her and told her to remove her clothes. She did so BUT told the guy: "If you are going to have sex with me, can you please wear a condom?". The guy responded " I don't have any STD's". That is when the woman replied "How do you know I don't?":eye-poppi The man then used a condom but continued to hold the knife to the woman's throat. The man was later caught. His defense? That the sex was CONSENSUAL because she asked him to use a condom:jaw-dropp !
The woman did testify in court that she knew she was going to be "raped" and there was no escape. She had tried to hit him and fight back. It was when she realized she couldn't stop it that she requested the condom. The jury found the guy NOT guilty of rape!:boggled:
So would this be defined? Interesting huh?
 
So, any penetration is rape. Does that mean anything non-penetrative cannot be rape? Would it fall under the broader "sexual assault", or not count as a crime at all? The Florida law quoted above doesn't address it.

Depending on the action, it might be a crime under the various assault statutes. I don't know them so well, so I can't give you a quick answer.

While looking on the web, I came across the "sexual assault" policy of the University of Florida, where the study was done:

The University of Florida values the health and safety of every individual on campus and expects its students to treat other persons with respect and dignity. Sexual assault will not be tolerated.

The term "sexual assault" as used by the university is synonymous with "sexual battery" a violation of state law, which is defined as the "oral, anal or vaginal penetration by or union with, the sexual organ of another or the anal or vaginal penetration by another with any other object."

Sexual assault also is a violation of the University of Florida's Code of Student Conduct and may result in sanctions ranging from probation to expulsion. Disciplinary action on the part of the university does not preclude the possibility of criminal charges against the individual.

This can be found at http://www.counsel.ufl.edu/selfHelp/sexualAssault.asp

Again, I ask people to read this three or four times. Yes, they really are saying that. Yes, they're a university and should know better, or at least have basic literacy skills. It's no wonder that the UF football team doesn't do so hot.
 
ReFLeX's cite:
60% of Canadian college-aged males indicated that they would commit sexual assault if they were certain they would not get caught.
See, when I read a statistical claim like that, alarm bells go off in my head. I've read enough about how outfits like Zogby produce the statisitcal results their clients want by posing questions in a certain way and then interpreting the results. A good example (taken from this CSICOP Doubt and About column) is this question from a Zogby poll:
Do you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree, or strongly disagree with the following statement: "When Darwin's theory of evolution is taught in school, students should also be able to learn about the scientific evidence that points to an intelligent design of life."
Well, damn, what fair-minded person could object to that? You'll almost certainly get an overwhelming majority of respondents who agree, be it "strongly" or "somewhat." But when it comes to presenting the results in a press release, the original question is conveniently omitted, and the figures are presented as if to demonstrate that "an overwhelming number of respondent support the teaching of ID in schools." This is, of course, twaddle, since ID isn't science, so the purported result does not reflect what the respondents actually agreed with.

I suspect something similar is up with that "willingness to commit sexual assault" statistic. Whatever question those 60% of respondents answered "yes" to, I'm willing to bet that it wasn't
If given the opportunity to commit an act of sexual assault without negative repercussions for yourself, would you do so?
The use of the word "indicated" (rather than "said") in the cite, I think, supports this assertion. Instead, I would surmise, the respondents were asked whether they would commit various activities, some of which, unbeknownst to them, fall (or could be argued to fall) under some definition of "sexual assault." Then you tot up all the respondents who said "yes" to at least one of the proffered scenarios--which the interviewer is careful not at any time to disclose as being considered to be "(a form of) sexual assault"--and voilà, there's your 60%.

Short version: I don't trust interpretations of statistical data; I want to see the raw data, including the exact wording of the original questions. I worked as a market research survey-taker for a few years, and I know how unrealistic the "professional" statisticians can be.

I might add that I've also worked on prosecuting war crimes, and I don't subscribe to the notion that "rape is all about power." Sex is as much a part of rape as money is a part of mugging, even though power issues undeniably play a major role in both crimes.
 
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I might add that I've also worked on prosecuting war crimes, and I don't subscribe to the notion that "rape is all about power." Sex is as much a part of rape as money is a part of mugging, even though power issues undeniably play a major role in both crimes.
Aha. Actually that is the question I was really curious about. I think I may now look up that other study once I'm in the library, but the "rape is all about power" theory is really where my skepticism lies. Is the study from the OP the sole source of this idea or is it a feminist mantra, or what?
 
Aha. Actually that is the question I was really curious about. I think I may now look up that other study once I'm in the library, but the "rape is all about power" theory is really where my skepticism lies. Is the study from the OP the sole source of this idea or is it a feminist mantra, or what?

I'm not an expert on it by any means, but I suspect that the "rape is all about power" BS (and I do firmly think it's BS as a categorical explanation) began in the 70s with the Andrea Dworkin/Catherine MacKinnon school of radical feminism that demonized maleness and everything associated with it. Their brand of male bashing and loathing is despicable. This is around the same time Gloria Steinem declared that a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle. I realize her comment was really about establishing female independence, but it was also twisted into a male bashing mantra. It's not any more justified or fair than traditional chauvinism or misogyny are.

Of course, my criticism of their warped views does not in any sense mean I endorse or condone actual rape or sexual assault. Nevertheless, their definitions of rape and sexual assault were overbroad and included many consensual activities between adults. Perhaps Dworkin and MacKinnon were not the originators of many of their ideas, and were merely reflecting some of the emerging schools of thought in American universities at the time. I suspect them and their intellectual forebears of instigating and promulgating various studies about rape and sexual assault that probably overestimate their incidence.

Rape and sexual assault no doubt occur with chilling frequency. It cheapens and trivializes the horrible and insidious trauma that real victims undergo, however, when feminists go too far and include most females in the category of its victims. Furthermore, it places undeserved guilt at the feet of many men who don't deserve it and serves to drive an unnecessary wedge between male and female relations. Men in general are not the enemy of women in general. I wish that rape studies and their overblown statistics would quit suggesting that they are.

AS
 
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So let's see what "sexual battery" means according to Florida law. It's in section 794.011, paragraph h:

(h) "Sexual battery" means oral, anal, or vaginal penetration by, or union with, the sexual organ of another or the anal or vaginal penetration of another by any other object; however, sexual battery does not include an act done for a bona fide medical purpose.

That is the complete definition of "sexual battery" in Florida. Read it three or four times. Most people don't get it the first time.

Yes, it really says this and only this. Every sex act, with the possible exception of kissing, is legally "sexual battery" in Florida. Do your own google search if you don't believe me. You've got the numbers.

I'll be back with more later, but you really need to read the whole statute, not just the part that defines the terms used in the statute. Sexual battery in Florida is only criminal when the victim is under the age of 12 or when a victim over the age of 12 does not give consent, is mentally defective or mentally incapacitated, etc.

http://www.flsenate.gov/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=Ch0794/ch0794.htm
 
Hokay. Here goes:
ReFLeX said:
A class of mine covered rape in a recent lecture, where we learned that:
60% of Canadian college-aged males indicated that they would commit sexual assault if they were certain they would not get caught.
http://www.wavaw.ca/informed_stats.php(2)
I don't know the origin of the Canadian number, but there were several studies by Neil Malamuth and colleagues that asked this question, giving rates ranging between 35-50% (e.g., Malamuth, Sockloskie, Koss, & Tanaka, 1991; Malamuth, 1981)
Euromutt said:
<snip>I suspect something similar is up with that "willingness to commit sexual assault" statistic. Whatever question those 60% of respondents answered "yes" to, I'm willing to bet that it wasn't
If given the opportunity to commit an act of sexual assault without negative repercussions for yourself, would you do so?
Malamuth originally asked "What is the likelihood you would rape a woman if you were sure no one would ever find out and you'd never be punished for it?" Later, Malamuth either added a second question (sometimes replacing the first) with "What is the likelihood you would engage in forced sex with a woman if you were sure no one would ever find out and you'd never be punished for it?"

epepke said:
However, I tracked down the sources of one such claim about the US. It was a study done in Gainesville, Florida in the mid-1970s, partly commissioned by Ms. magazine. The study concluded that more than half of college-aged males had engaged in activities that fit "the legal definition" of rape. I can't remember the name of the people who did this study, but I once xeroxed a copy from the University library and kept it around until it fell apart.
I do know of a Ms. comissioned study, but it was published in 1987 and involved a national sample in which there were 2972 men. The rates were significantly lower than 50%; 25.1% admitted to engaging in some form of unwanted sexual contact, only 4.4% admitting to engaging in rape. There is a number close to 50% in the Koss et al. study: 53.7% of women report some form of sexual victimization, ranging from unwanted sexual contact to rape. I don't know of another Ms. study, but given the hissyfit you threw later in your post, I won't ask you for a reference for the Gainesville one.
TragicMonkey said:
So, any penetration is rape. Does that mean anything non-penetrative cannot be rape? Would it fall under the broader "sexual assault", or not count as a crime at all? The Florida law quoted above doesn't address it.

eta: Whoops. First sentence, I mean, as in assault, non-consenting.
Definitions vary by state. In Missouri, forcible rape is defined as penetration of the vagina by a penis. Forced oral or anal sex using a penis or any penetration not involving a penis is considered deviate sexual intercourse, and is considered forcible sodomy. In some cases there are different penalties, in some cases not. Researchers studying sexual assault tend to use their state's legal definition, or Ohio's (as one of the primary researchers in the area, the first author on the Ms. associated study mentioned above, designed her study there and folks want to stay consistent).

ReFLeX said:
Does anyone else know why this power quote is so widespread? Even the study actually includes anger as a third motivation, so it would seem rape is not just "all about power". And how can drunken teenaged encounters not be about sex at all? That's the number one thing people seem to infer, that it "has nothing to do with sex." Is there any other research?

AmateurScientist said:
I'm not an expert on it by any means, but I suspect that the "rape is all about power" BS (and I do firmly think it's BS as a categorical explanation) began in the 70s with the Andrea Dworkin/Catherine MacKinnon school of radical feminism that demonized maleness and everything associated with it.

Radical feminists are just that: radical. Many feminists are not going to argue that all heterosexual sex is rape, or that all men consciously use rape as a tool to oppress women. Certainly researchers in the area are not going to take that view. A quote from one of the more prolific and respected researchers in the area notes this:
Conceptualizing rape as a sex act alone ignores that this is a serious crime where the penis is used as a weapon....The force behind the criminal act or rape is a mixture of sexual motives and motives to control/dominate/punish that vary in degree from case to case.... The important semantic distinction is that rape is not a sex act, it is a crime that can be impelled by sexual motives. Acknowledging this mixture of motives is not new. --Mary Koss, in Evolution, Gender, & Rape (2003)
Now, Koss is not considered a radical feminist, but this excerpt may serve to show why power should be the focus. Most will acknowldege that rape is forced sex. Before the 1970's, the focus was often on the "sex" part of that phrase, which served in many cases to silence the crime. Putting the focus on "forced" was, from how I understand it, an effort to get people to recognize that rape is a crime of violence.

AmateurScientist said:
Of course, my criticism of their warped views does not in any sense mean I endorse or condone actual rape or sexual assault. Nevertheless, their definitions of rape and sexual assault were overbroad and included many consensual activities between adults.
True. In feminist writings, you can find many different definitions of rape, and you have to see if the particular philosophy of feminism that claims these definitions is one you agree with. Psychologists doing research on rape prevalence and incidence, however, use rather restrictive definitions.

AmateurScientist said:
Perhaps Dworkin and MacKinnon were not the originators of many of their ideas, and were merely reflecting some of the emerging schools of thought in American universities at the time. I suspect them and their intellectual forebears of instigating and promulgating various studies about rape and sexual assault that probably overestimate their incidence. (emphasis added)
As one of my old professors used to say, this is an empirical question. If you believe that researchers are using definitions of rape that are too broad, it's very easy to tell. Just go the the methods section of the studies you have issue with. You'll find that many of the figures people have such a "I can't believe it!" response to tend to combine percentages for rape and attempted rape. In some cases, all kinds of unwanted sexual contact is counted. However, I very much doubt you'll be able to find a case where research published in a peer-reviewed journal uses the term "rape" when referring to figures aggregated in either of those ways. "Sexual assault" is a broader term that is often used to cover these larger numbers.

AmateurScientist said:
Rape and sexual assault no doubt occur with chilling frequency. It cheapens and trivializes the horrible and insidious trauma that real victims undergo, however, when feminists go too far and include most females in the category of its victims.
This statement is one I can almost agree with, but you need to tell me who a "real victim" is first. Would you consider a woman who was forced to give oral sex to her perpetrator as a "real victim?" You're obviously working from a definition of rape/sexual assault you find acceptable. What meets your criteria?

AmateurScientist said:
Men in general are not the enemy of women in general. I wish that rape studies and their overblown statistics would quit suggesting that they are.
Maybe you should try some of the psychology literature (Psychology of Women Quarterly, Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, Journal of Applied Social Psychology, to name a few). All the statistics do say and can say is what should be obvious: rape is crime where most victims are women and almost all perpetrators are men. It does not necessarily follow from the stats that men in general are therefore the enemies of women in general. I'd suspect that this argument is not made in association with scientific research, but rather philosophical writing or position pieces. It's an important distinction.

(edited for those quote code thingies)
 
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How much stock can you put in these "if you knew you wouldnt be caught.." statistics??

As for sexual battery. Wouldnt pinching a girls ass fall under that? Thats a far cry from rape.
 
How much stock can you put in these "if you knew you wouldnt be caught.." statistics??

This is an excellent point. It's not that I don't put stock in them, it's I don't know how to interpret them.

For example, you get an answer of 50%. Is that bad? I think it depends on the baseline. For example, maybe if you asked "If could kill your most hated enemy and knew you wouldn't be caught, would you do it?" and you found out that 70% said yes, then shoot, a 50% answer would indicate that people take rape much more seriously than murder, even.

Or "If you could steal $100 million and know you would never get caught..."

I just don't know the context of the answer.
 
I think the "rape is power" is so prevalent because it damaging for any man to refute it.

For example, if a man states "Some men are sexually excited by the idea of raping a woman" the two immediate responses are:
1) Are you on sexually excited by the idea? (No, is never believed.)
2) You are a rapist.

Most men are smart enought to avoid this blunder.

CBL
 
This is an excellent point. It's not that I don't put stock in them, it's I don't know how to interpret them.

For example, you get an answer of 50%. Is that bad? I think it depends on the baseline. For example, maybe if you asked "If could kill your most hated enemy and knew you wouldn't be caught, would you do it?" and you found out that 70% said yes, then shoot, a 50% answer would indicate that people take rape much more seriously than murder, even.

Or "If you could steal $100 million and know you would never get caught..."

I just don't know the context of the answer.

The LR (Likelihood to Rape) questions are not used much in research anymore, for reasons similar to these.
 
As a game, with both parties involved, it might be fun and arousing for me, sure.

But there is a BIG difference between those two.

So, i would admit to #1, as long as it is just a game.
#2 though, no. I never press the issue of sex, and never would.

I don't even think i could perform if i tried, and i'm too much of a wuzz to try.

And the whole idea of it is repulsive and demeaning. To take something by force is wrong, in any manner.

As a game though, it might be amusing.
 
As for the wording of the rape law--though I agree it effectively states that anything fitting the physical description is a battery--I bet it could be successfully argued in court that the definition referred to the "sexual" part of the term, whereas "battery" is already defined elsewhere in statutes, including the issue of consent.
 
As a game, with both parties involved, it might be fun and arousing for me, sure.

But there is a BIG difference between those two.

So, i would admit to #1, as long as it is just a game.
#2 though, no. I never press the issue of sex, and never would.

I don't even think i could perform if i tried, and i'm too much of a wuzz to try.

And the whole idea of it is repulsive and demeaning. To take something by force is wrong, in any manner.

As a game though, it might be amusing. (emphasis added)
That's the thing. People might see little problem with "rape" if they really believe that the sex was consensual. If one is just pretending to rape their partner, and their partner knows that "pretending to struggle futily but eventually being overcome with lust" turns your crank (and his/hers, hopefully), well, is that the kind of thing people are thinking of when they answer the LR questions? It's not really rape, because the partner is consenting.
 

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