NCJ Number
86670
Journal
Women and Health Volume: 5 Issue: 1 Dated: (Spring 1980) Pages: 65-79
Date Published
1980
Length
15 pages
Annotation
In recent years, public interest and concern about the plight of the rape victim has increased. A recurrent theme in much of the popular literature about rape is that rape victims are blamed for their circumstances.
Abstract
The present study considers how judgments made by police (N=368) and nurses (N=312) regarding victim responsibility are influenced by the type of crime, the victim's marital status, her dress, her relationship with the assailant, evidence of her resistance, the extent of her injuries, and attitudinal and sociodemographic characteristics of the police and nurses. Evaluations of victim responsibility were elicited by vignettes. Findings suggest that, in general, victims are given very little responsibility for rape, and that police and nurses tend to make similar evaluations regarding the victim's participation in a crime. Two major occupational differences are described. Non-white police officers tend to blame victims of rape and beating somewhat more than white police officers. Nurses who see themselves as likely victims of a crime blame rape victims more than those who view their victimization as remote. Attitudinal and psychological characteristics of both nurses and police emerged as the strongest predictors of victim blaming. (Author abstract)