Preventing Sexual Violence?

Author:

Carmody Moira12,Carrington Kerry1

Affiliation:

1. University of Western Sydney

2. Critical Social Sciences, Research Group, University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury Locked Bag 1, Richmond NSW 2753, Australia.

Abstract

This article critically assesses the main social policy responses to preventing rape following much feminist struggle to make sexual violence a public matter of legitimate concern. It considers the preventative potential of legal measures, anti-violence campaigns waged by feminist and men's groups in the US and Australia, public education campaigns in Schools and Universities, and public awareness campaigns sponsored by the state. We argue that sexual violence is not amenable to quick fix strategies that place responsibility for prevention entirely on individual men or women. While we recognise that responsibilising victims and individualising offenders is consistent with wider global shifts in social policy calling upon individuals to manage their own risk, we argue that the increasing reliance on such neo-liberal social policy is especially problematic in preventing rape. The paper suggests ways to resist this which place greater emphasis on the promotion of sexual ethics; the eroticisation of consent; the reinvention of the norms of romance to include both these, and the complete separation of the psycho-social-symbolic connections between sex and violence, and ultimately the re-evaluation of the cultural expectations of masculinity and femininity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pathology and Forensic Medicine,Law,Social Psychology

Reference91 articles.

1. BonneyR. (1985). Crimes (Sexual Assault) Amendment Act, 1981, Monitoring and Evaluation, (Interim Report on the Characteristics of the complainant, the defendant and offence). Sydney: New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, Attorney General's Department.

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