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  1. Normalizing Sexual Violence: Young Women Account for Harassment and Abuse.Heather R. Hlavka - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (3):337-358.
    Despite high rates of gendered violence among youth, very few young women report these incidents to authority figures. This study moves the discussion from the question of why young women do not report them toward how violence is produced, maintained, and normalized among youth. The girls in this study often did not name what law, researchers, and educators commonly identify as sexual harassment and abuse. How then, do girls name and make sense of victimization? Exploring violence via the lens of (...)
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  • Fraternities and collegiate rape culture: Why are some fraternities more dangerous places for women?Joan Z. Spade & A. Ayres Boswell - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (2):133-147.
    Social interactions at fraternities that undergraduate women identified as places where there is a high risk of rape are compared to those at fraternities identified as low risk as well as two local bars. Factors that contribute to rape are common on this campus; however, both men and women behaved differently in different settings. Implications of these findings are considered.
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  • New Bedford, massachusetts, March 6, 1983-March 22, 1984:: The “before and after” of a group rape.Lynn S. Chancer - 1987 - Gender and Society 1 (3):239-260.
    Following the highly publicized New Bedford rape case, in which a young woman was raped by several men on a pool table in New Bedford, Massachusetts, on March 6, 1983, a segment of the local Portuguese community responded with great hostility to the rape victim and with sympathy for the rapists. The victim was blamed for the ethnic prejudice that erupted after the rape and culminated in the trial of six rapists in 1984. This article's purpose is to analyze the (...)
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  • Fraternities and rape on campus.Robert A. Hummer & Patricia Yancey Martin - 1989 - Gender and Society 3 (4):457-473.
    Despite widespread knowledge that fraternity members are frequently involved in the sexual assaults of women, fraternities are rarely studied as social contexts-groups and organizations-that encourage the sexual coercion of women. An analysis of the norms and dynamics of the social construction of fraternity brotherhood reveals the highly masculinist features of fraternity structure and process, including concern with a narrow, stereotypical conception of masculinity and heterosexuality; a preoccupation with loyalty, protection of the group, and secrecy; the use of alcohol as a (...)
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  • p Against a Wall: Rape Reform and the Failure of Success.Rose Corrigan - 2013 - NYU Press.
    In a series of richly detailed case studies, the book weaves together scholarship on law and social movements, feminist theory, policy formation and implementation, and criminal justice to show how the innovative legal strategies employed by anti-rape advocates actually undermined some of their central claims. But even as its more radical elements were thwarted, pieces of the rape law reform project were seized upon by conservative policy-makers and used to justify new initiatives that often prioritize the interests and rights of (...)
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