Gender, campus sexual violence, cultural betrayal, institutional betrayal, and institutional support in U.S. ethnic minority college students: a descriptive study
Date Issued
2022-01Publisher Version
10.1177/1077801221998757Author(s)
Gómez, Jennifer M.
Metadata
Show full item recordPermanent Link
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/46063Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation (published version)
J.M. Gómez. 2022. "Gender, Campus Sexual Violence, Cultural Betrayal, Institutional Betrayal, and Institutional Support in U.S. Ethnic Minority College Students: A Descriptive Study." Violence Against Women: an international and interdisciplinary journal, Volume 28, Issue 1, pp.93-106. https://doi.org/10.1177/1077801221998757Abstract
Women and ethnic minorities are at increased risk for campus sexual violence (CSV). Due to inequality, within-group victimization in marginalized communities includes cultural betrayal. Universities commit institutional betrayal (e.g., inadequate prevention) and institutional support (e.g., sensitivity). With a campus climate survey, the purpose of the study is to characterize, by gender, U.S. ethnic minority undergraduates' CSV, cultural and institutional betrayal, and institutional support. Participants (N = 222) were a random sample of ethnic minority undergraduates. College women experienced higher rates of CSV and institutional betrayal. Universities can implement a research agenda that centralizes the role of oppression in CSV.
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