https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_rape
Date rape is a form of acquaintance rape and dating violence. The two phrases are often used interchangeably, but date rape specifically refers to a rape in which there has been some sort of romantic or potentially sexual relationship between the two parties. Acquaintance rape also includes rapes in which the victim and perpetrator have been in a non-romantic, non-sexual relationship, for example as co-workers or neighbors.
Since the 1980s, date rape has constituted the majority of rapes in some countries. It is particularly prevalent on college campuses, and frequently involves consumption of alcohol or other date rape drugs. The peak age for date rape victims is from the late teens to early twenties.
Date rape is a form of acquaintance rape and dating violence. The two phrases are often used interchangeably, but date rape specifically refers to a rape in which there has been some sort of romantic or potentially sexual relationship between the two parties. Acquaintance rape also includes rapes in which the victim and perpetrator have been in a non-romantic, non-sexual relationship, for example as co-workers or neighbors.
Since the 1980s, date rape has constituted the majority of rapes in some countries. It is particularly prevalent on college campuses, and frequently involves consumption of alcohol or other date rape drugs. The peak age for date rape victims is from the late teens to early twenties.
Overview
A feature of date rape is that in most cases the victim is female, knows the perpetrator
and the rape takes place in the context of an actual or potential
romantic or sexual relationship between the parties, or when that
relationship has come to an end. The perpetrator may use physical or
psychological intimidation to force a victim to have sex against their
will, or when the perpetrator has sex with a victim who is incapable of
giving consent, for example, because they have been incapacitated by
alcohol or other drug.
According to the United States Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), date rapes are among the most common forms of rape cases. Date rape most commonly takes place among college students when alcohol is involved or date rape drugs are taken. One of the most targeted groups are women between the ages of 16 to 24.
The phenomenon of date rape is relatively new. Historically, date rape has been considered less serious than rape by a stranger.
Since the 1980s, it has constituted the majority of rapes in some
countries. It has been increasingly seen as a problem involving society's attitude towards women and as a form of violence against women.
It is controversial, however, with some people believing the problem is
overstated and that many date rape victims are actually willing,
consenting participants, and others believing that date rape is
seriously underreported and almost all women who claim date rape were
actually raped.
American researcher Mary Koss describes date rape as a specific form of acquaintance rape,
in which there has been some level of romantic interest between the
perpetrator and the victim, and in which sexual activity would have been
generally seen as appropriate, if consensual.
Acquaintance rape is a broader category than date rape, that can
include many types of relationships including employer-employee,
landlord-tenant, service provider-consumer, driver-hitchhiker, and rape
among people who have a family relationship or who are neighbours.
In his 1992 book Sex and Reason American jurist, legal theorist and economist Richard Posner
characterized the increased attention being given to date rape as a
sign of the changing status of women in American society, pointing out
that dating itself is a feature of modern societies and that date rape
can be expected to be frequent in a society in which sexual morals vary
between the permissive and the repressive.
In Sara Alcid's 2013 article "Navigating Consent: Debunking the “Gray
Area” Myth", she argues that dating is incorrectly believed to mean "a
permanent state of consenting to sex".
History
Since the final decades of the 20th century, in much of the world, rape has come to be broadly regarded as sexual intercourse (including anal or oral penetration) without a person's immediate consent,
making rape illegal, including among people who know each other or who
have previously had consensual sex. Some jurisdictions have specified
that people debilitated by alcohol or other drugs are incapable of consenting to sex. Courts have also disagreed on whether consent, once given, can later be withdrawn.
"Cultural and legal definitions of rape are always shaped by the
relationships and status of those involved, a premise that holds both
historically and cross-culturally."
Many societies rank the seriousness of a rape based on the
relationship between the perpetrator and the victim. "An assault by a
stranger is more likely to be seen as a 'real rape' than one by some-one
known to the victim."
Because of this cultural conception, many date rapes are considered to
be less serious than stranger rapes because the nature of the
perpetrator-victim relationship, especially for those who have had a
prior or current sexual relationship.
In college date rape has a different meaning, as in a date would be a
party where the woman is purposely given alcohol and drugs by the man
and usually his friends, therefore the rape is a group effort.
Use of term
The term date rape is first found in print in the 1975 book Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape by American feminist journalist, author and activist Susan Brownmiller. But it is likely that the first use of the term was by the prominent feminist American-British lawyer Ann Olivarius in a series of public lectures at Yale University
when she was an undergraduate to describe the strangulation and rape of
a woman by a now-prominent gerontologist in California, Dr. Calvin
Hirsch, to Yale's police department. In 1980 it was used in Mademoiselle magazine, in 1982 Ms. magazine published an article titled "Date Rape: A Campus Epidemic?", and in 1984 English novelist Martin Amis used the term in his novel Money: A Suicide Note. One of the earliest and most prominent date rape researchers is Mary Koss,
who in 1987 conducted the first large-scale nationwide study on rape in
the United States, surveying 7,000 students at 25 schools, and who is
sometimes credited with originating the phrase date rape.
Prevalence
The concept of date rape originated in the United States, where most of the research on date rape has been carried out.
One out of every five teens are victims of date rape.
Rape prevalence among women in the U.S. (the percentage of women who
experienced rape at least once in their lifetime so far) is in the range
of 15–20%, with different studies disagreeing with each other. An early
1987 study found that one in four American women will be the victim of a
rape or attempted rape in her lifetime, and 84% of those will know
their attacker. However, only 27% of American women whose sexual assault
met the legal definition of rape think of themselves as rape victims,
and only about 5% report their rape.
One study of rape on American college campuses found that 13% of
acquaintance rapes, and 35% of attempted acquaintance rapes, took place
during a date, and another found that 22% of female rape victims had
been raped by a current or former date, boyfriend or girlfriend, and
another 20% by a spouse or former spouse.
A 2007 American study found black non-Hispanic students were likeliest
to be victims of dating violence, followed by Hispanic students and then
white non-Hispanic students.
Rates of date rape are relatively low in Europe compared with the United States.
The rate of reported rapes is much lower in Japan than the United States. In a 1993 paper German sociologist and criminologist Joachim Kersten
suggested date rape may be less prevalent in Japan compared with the
United States because Japanese culture puts a lesser emphasis on
romantic love and dating, and because young Japanese people have less
physical privacy than their American counterparts, and in her 2007 book Kickboxing Geishas: How Modern Japanese Women Are Changing Their Nation, American feminist Veronica Chambers questions whether date rape is under-reported in Japan because it isn't yet understood there to be rape. In the 2011 book Transforming Japan: How Feminism and Diversity Are Making a Difference Japanese
feminist Masaki Matsuda argued that date rape was becoming an
increasing problem for Japanese college and high school students.
A 2007 study of attitudes towards rape among university students
in South Korea found that date rape was "rarely recognized" as a form of
rape, and that forced sex by a date was not viewed as traumatizing or
criminal.
Date rape is generally underreported in Vietnam.
In 2012, 98% of reported rapes in India were committed by someone known to the victim.
Victims
Researcher Mary Koss says the peak age for being date raped is from the late teens to early twenties.
Even though date rape is considered a hurtful, destructive and life-changing experience, research done by Mufson and Kranz
showed that lack of support is a factor that determines the fragmented
recovery of victims. They refused to disclose any information about the
sexual assault to others, especially if they have experienced date or
acquaintance rape due to self-humiliation and self-blame feelings.
However, there are several situational contexts where victims are
able to seek for help or reveal the sexual assaults they have
experienced. One act for disclosure can be provoked from the willing of
preventing other people from being raped, in other words, speaking out.
Also, a concern transmitted by the people surrounding the victim can
lead into a confession of the assault, or within a situation in which
alcohol is involved and that leads to recount the experience.
Minority group victims
Most
of the research on sexual assault victims has been carried out with
White-middle class population. However, the scale of date and
acquaintance rape among the Black and Hispanic youth population is
higher, and has its particular risk factors.
A research conducted in 2013 indicated that sexual assault situations
were greater among Hispanic (12.2%) and Black (11.5%) female high-school
students than whites (9.1%).
Effects
Researchers
say date rape affects victims similarly to stranger rape, although the
failure of others to acknowledge and take the rape seriously can make it
harder for victims to recover.
Rape crimes are more frequently perpetrated by people that the
victims have confidence with and have known for quite some time.
Nevertheless, some people's beliefs don't fit within the date rape
scenario paradigm
because they firmly prejudiced and stereotyped rape, victims and
perpetrators. They tend to justify date rape and blame victims,
particularly women victims, for the sexual assault by emphasizing the
wearing of provocative clothing or the existence of a romantic
relationship.
One of the main problems of date rape attributions is the type of
relationship that the victim and the offender shared. The more intimate
the relationship between both partners, the more probable that
witnesses will consider the sexual assault as consensual rather than a
serious incident.
Perpetrators and motivations
A
2002 landmark study of undetected date rapists in Boston found that
compared with non-rapists, rapists are measurably more angry at women
and more motivated by a desire to dominate and control them, are more
impulsive, disinhibited, antisocial, hypermasculine,
and less empathic. The study found the rapists were extremely adept at
identifying potential victims and testing their boundaries, and that
they planned their attacks and used sophisticated strategies to isolate
and groom victims, used violence instrumentally in order to terrify and
coerce, and used psychological weapons against their victims including
power, manipulation, control and threats.
Date rapists target vulnerable victims, such as female freshmen who
have less experience with drinking and are more likely to take risks, or
people who are already intoxicated; they use alcohol as a weapon,
as it makes the victim more vulnerable and impairs their credibility
with the justice system should they choose to report the rape.
American clinical psychologist David Lisak,
the study's author and an expert in date rape, says that serial rapists
account for 90% of all campus rapes, with an average of six rapes each.
Lisak argues that this and similar findings conflict sharply with the
widely held view that college rapes are typically perpetrated by "a
basically 'decent' young man who, were it not for too much alcohol and
too little communication, would never do such a thing", with the
evidence actually suggesting that the vast majority of rapes, including
date rapes, are committed by serial, violent predators.
Punishment
Date rape has a particular dynamic: the sexual assault happens on a date type of setting. Therefore, date rapes trials are considered inconclusive by nature and are charged with social concerns (e.g. gender roles,
sexuality, body-shape). The criminal justice system urges the victim to
describe the sexual assault in detail in order to be able to make a
decision in court, ignoring the possibility that the trial can create a
hostile environment and be a disturbing moment for the victim. Jurors’ personal beliefs and rape myth acceptance can be influential in their decision when it comes to evaluating the scenery, evidence, and making a sentence.
Research has found that jurors are more likely to convict in
stranger rape cases than in date rape cases. Often, even in cases in
which sufficient physical evidence
is present to support conviction, juries have reported being influenced
by irrelevant factors related to the female victim such as whether she
used birth control,
engaged in non-marital sex, was perceived by jurors as sexually
dressed, or had engaged in alcohol or other drug use. Researchers have
noted that because date rape by definition occurs in the context of a
dating relationship, jurors' propensity to discount the likelihood of
rape having occurred based on date-like behaviors is problematic.
A 1982 American study of assignment of responsibility for rape found
respondents were more likely to assign greater responsibility to a rape
victim if she was intoxicated at the time of the rape; however, when her
assailant was intoxicated, respondents assigned him less
responsibility.
Some critics of the term date rape believe the distinction
between stranger rape and date rape seems to position date rape as a
lesser offence, which is insulting to date rape victims and could partly
explain the lower conviction rates and lesser punishments of date rape
cases.
Prevention
David
Lisak argues that prevention efforts aimed at persuading men not to
rape are unlikely to work, and universities should instead focus on
helping non-rapists to identify rapists and intervene in high-risk
situations to stop them.
Lisak also argues that whenever a nonstranger sexual assault is
reported, it represents a window of opportunity for law enforcement to
comprehensively investigate the alleged offender, rather than "putting
blinders on looking solely on the alleged 45-minute interaction between
these two people".
Lisak believes rape victims should be treated with respect, and that
every report of an alleged rape should trigger two simultaneous
investigations: one into the incident itself, and a second into the
alleged perpetrator to determine whether they are a serial offender.
Education programs are one way to prevent, protect, and raise
awareness about rape and acquaintance rape. But these prevention
programs don't have a huge impact.
The combination of sexual harassment prevention tips, survival
information and the psychosocial data gathered from women's assessment
of date risks, make these programs focus on broad topics and don't
emphasize specific and particular areas of date rape prevention.
Future prevention programs should focused on engaging men,
creating an open space for conversation and the possible recognition of
holding gender bias beliefs and sexual behavior myths, which can lead
them to promote sexual harassment behavior.
In media and popular culture
Date
rape was widely discussed on college campuses in North America during
the 1980s but first attracted significant media attention in 1991, when
an unnamed 29-year-old woman accused William Kennedy Smith, a nephew of U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy,
of raping her when they went for a walk on the beach after meeting in a
Florida bar. Millions of people watched the trial on television. Also
in 1991, Katie Koestner came forward publicly about her own experience with date rape. Koestner was featured on the cover of TIME Magazine, appeared on shows such as Larry King Live and The Oprah Winfrey Show. Her efforts helped bring a human face to victims of date rape and helped bring the term into common use.
Hip-hop band A Tribe Called Quest has a song titled The Infamous Date Rape, included in their album The Low End Theory, which was released shortly after the William Kennedy Smith incident. American ska punk band Sublime released a humorous song called Date Rape in 1991; the song ends with the date rapist being sent to prison and being anally raped by a fellow inmate.
Date rape received more media attention in 1992, when former boxer Mike Tyson was convicted of rape after inviting 18-year-old Desiree Washington to a party and then raping her in his hotel room.
In 1993, Koestner was featured in an HBO special, No Visible Bruises: The Katie Koestner Story as part of the series, Lifestories: Families in Crisis.
Controversies
In her 1994 book The Morning After: Sex, Fear, and Feminism, American author Katie Roiphe
wrote about attending Harvard and Princeton in the late 1980s and early
1990s, amid what she described as a "culture captivated by
victimization", and argued "If a woman's 'judgment is impaired' and she
has sex, it isn't always the man's fault; it isn't necessarily always
rape."
In 2007, American journalist Laura Sessions Stepp wrote an article for Cosmopolitan magazine titled "A New Kind of Date Rape", in which she popularized the term "gray rape" to refer to "sex that falls somewhere between consent and denial". The term was afterwards picked up and discussed by The New York Times, Slate, and PBS, and was criticized by many feminists, including Bitch founding editor Lisa Jervis,
who argued that gray rape and date rape "are the same thing", and that
the popularization of gray rape constituted a backlash against women's
sexual empowerment and risked rolling back the gains women had made in
having rape taken seriously.