Affiliation:
1. University of Rochester
Abstract
This research examined attitudes that predict rape blame in contexts of interethnic violence between minority Muslims and dominant Hindu communities in Mumbai, India. I hypothesized that, in contexts of interethnic violence, prejudicial attitudes toward communities and attitudes that view rape as a conflict tool (i.e., an effective strategy to control an ethnic community) would predict victim blame. This study is among the first to provide empirical support that ethnic prejudice and specific misogynistic attitudes are important predictors of rape victim blame in ethnic violence contexts. Findings indicate that attitudes that exploit women's positions across categories of gender and religious community predict higher victim blame attributions. Findings are relevant to current intercommunity relationships and provide insights for community-based responses and primary interventions.
Subject
General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology,Gender Studies
Cited by
5 articles.
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1. Toward an inclusive, affirmative transnational psychology.;Transnational psychology of women: Expanding international and intersectional approaches.;2019
2. Chapter 7 Mainstreaming Gender, Endangered, Ungendered? Analysis of Media Reports of the 2012 Case of Rape in India;Advances in Gender Research;2018-10-30
3. The Impact of Class and Sexuality-Based Stereotyping on Rape Blame;Sexualization, Media, & Society;2016-04-25
4. Information Deprivation Trauma: Definition, Assessment, and Interventions;Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma;2016-04-13
5. Rape, War, and the Socialization of Masculinity;Psychology of Women Quarterly;2010-11-02