Primary Versus Secondary Prevention Effects of a Gender-Transformative Sexual Violence Prevention Program Among Male Youth: A Planned Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial

Author:

Culyba Alison J.1ORCID,Fuhrman Barbara1,Barker Gary2,Abebe Kaleab Z.1,Miller Elizabeth1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA, USA

2. Equimundo Center for Masculinities and Social Justice, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

Engaging adolescent males is a promising violence prevention strategy. This study explored primary versus secondary prevention effects of a gender-transformative program (i.e., Manhood 2.0) versus job-readiness training on multiple forms of violence perpetration. Adolescent males, ages 13 to 19 years, were recruited through youth-serving organizations in Pittsburgh, PA, between July 27, 2015, and June 5, 2017, to participate in an unblinded community-based cluster-randomized trial in 20 neighborhoods. The intervention curriculum, Manhood 2.0, focused on challenging norms that foster gender-based violence and building bystander skills. The control program was job-readiness training. We completed a planned secondary analysis of surveys from baseline and 9 months post intervention (follow-up), wherein we stratified participants based on any sexual violence/adolescent relationship abuse (SV/ARA) at baseline and examined risk of perpetration of SV/ARA, incapacitated sex, sexual harassment, cyber sexual abuse, peer violence, bullying, and homophobic teasing at follow-up. Among 866 participants, mean age was 15.6 years, 70% identified as Black, 6% as Hispanic, and 6% as multiracial. In both the Manhood 2.0 intervention group and job-readiness control groups, youth who reported SV/ARA at baseline were significantly more likely to report any form of SV/ARA, incapacitated sex, sexual harassment, cyber sexual abuse, bullying, and homophobic teasing at follow-up. Among participants who reported no SV/ARA perpetration at baseline, participating in the Manhood 2.0 intervention program was associated with increased risk of SV/ARA at follow-up compared to participating in the job-readiness control program. Among participants who reported SV/ARA perpetration at baseline, participating in the Manhood 2.0 intervention group was associated with lower risk of peer violence at follow-up. Synergizing gender-transformative approaches with job-readiness training may offer opportunities for crosscutting prevention programming to address multiple forms of violence.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology

Reference60 articles.

1. AAUW Educational Foundation Sexual Harassment Task Force. (2004). Harassment-free hallways: How to stop sexual harassment in schools. American Association of University Women Educational Foundation: Washington, DC. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED534504.

2. Engendering healthy masculinities to prevent sexual violence: Rationale for and design of the Manhood 2.0 trial

3. Empowering adolescent girls: developing egalitarian gender norms and relations to end violence

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