Judgments about sexual assault vary depending on whether an affirmative consent policy or a “no means no” policy is applied

IF 0.7 Q4 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Monica K. Miller
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Affirmative consent (AC) policies require potential sexual partners to clearly and positively confirm that they want to engage in sexual behavior – in contrast to standard “no means no” policies, which typically define consent through resistance. AC policies might not be effective because they do not align well with typical scripts of how consent is given in practice. This study aims to compare participants’ judgments as to what constitutes sexual assault, using either an AC policy or a standard “no means no” policy.,Participants read 16 scenarios depicting various male-female sexual encounters and applied either an AC or a standard “no means no” policy to determine whether the encounter was consensual.,When an AC policy was used, participants were more likely to judge the scenario as sexual assault. Aspects of the scenario (which reflect AC policy criteria), such as the type of communication (verbal or nonverbal), clarity of communication (clear or unclear) and resistance (high or low) also affected judgments of the scenario. Relationship type (stranger vs acquaintance) did not affect judgments. Students were more likely to perceive the scenarios as sexual assault than community members; they also perceived differences between scenarios based on verbal communication and clarity more than community members. Finally, there was no main effect of participant gender, however, men perceived differences between scenarios based on verbal communication type, whereas women did not.,Findings indicate that participants are generally able to apply AC policies correctly, even though AC criteria do not generally align with common sexual scripts.,This is the first study known to test whether decision-makers can properly apply criteria outlined in AC policies and whether the application of these policies affect decisions-makers judgments as to whether a sexual encounter is consensual or assault.
对性侵犯的判决取决于是否适用肯定同意政策或“不意味着不”政策
肯定同意(AC)政策要求潜在的性伴侣明确和积极地确认他们想要进行性行为——与标准的“不意味着不”政策相反,后者通常通过抵制来定义同意。AC政策可能不会有效,因为它们与实践中如何给予同意的典型脚本不太一致。本研究旨在比较参与者对性侵犯构成的判断,使用AC政策或标准的“不意味着不”政策。参与者阅读了16个描述各种男女性接触的场景,并应用AC或标准的“不意味着不”政策来确定这种接触是否双方同意。当使用AC策略时,参与者更有可能将场景判断为性侵犯。情景的各个方面(反映交流政策标准),如沟通的类型(口头或非口头)、沟通的清晰度(清楚或不清楚)和阻力(高或低)也影响对情景的判断。关系类型(陌生人vs熟人)不影响判断。学生比社区成员更容易将这些场景视为性侵犯;他们也比社区成员更能感知到基于口头沟通和清晰度的不同场景。最后,没有参与者性别的主要影响,然而,男性根据语言交流类型感知到场景之间的差异,而女性则没有。研究结果表明,参与者通常能够正确地应用AC政策,即使AC标准通常与常见的性脚本不一致。这是已知的第一项研究,旨在测试决策者是否能够适当地应用AC政策中概述的标准,以及这些政策的应用是否会影响决策者对性接触是双方同意还是侵犯的判断。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
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