Exploring Potential Determinants of Sexual Victimization Disparities Among Young Sexual Minoritized People: A Mixed-Method Study

被引:17
|
作者
Flanders, Corey E. [1 ]
VanKim, Nicole [2 ]
Anderson, RaeAnn E. [3 ]
Tarasoff, Lesley A. [4 ]
机构
[1] Mt Holyoke Coll, Dept Psychol & Educ, 50 Coll St, S Hadley, MA 01075 USA
[2] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Publ Hlth & Hlth Sci, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
[3] Univ North Dakota, Dept Psychol, Grand Forks, ND USA
[4] Univ Toronto Scarborough, Dept Hlth & Soc, Scarborough, ON, Canada
关键词
sexual minority; bisexual; lesbian; sexual violence; INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; UNITED-STATES; MENTAL-HEALTH; ORIENTATION; ASSAULT; STIGMA; GENDER; TRANSGENDER; PREVALENCE; MULTILEVEL;
D O I
10.1037/sgd0000506
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Public Significance Statement In this study, we found that sexual stigma, meaning the negative attitudes and discriminatory behaviors based on privileging heterosexuality, was significantly associated with a greater likelihood of experiencing sexual violence for young bisexual people. We also identified that the sexual identity-specific factors, like sexual stigma, interacted with general factors, like decreased access to resources, to increase participants' vulnerability for sexual violence. Taken together, we believe that attention to sexual stigma, and in particular how sexual stigma impacts other areas of sexual minoritized people's lives, is critical to developing effective sexual violence prevention efforts for sexual minoritized people. Young sexual minoritized people report elevated rates of sexual violence in comparison with their heterosexual peers. This health disparity is largest among lesbian and bisexual people, and in particular bisexual women. We know little about what drives this health disparity, which is critically necessary information for developing effective sexual violence interventions. Recently, sexual stigma has been identified as an important factor related to sexual victimization among sexual minoritized people. The current article details a concurrent mixed-method study investigating what factors contribute to young lesbian and bisexual people's vulnerability for experiencing sexual violence, and in particular the similarities and differences between these two groups. We conducted a survey with 328 participants to investigate the quantitative relationships between sexual stigma and experience of sexual violence. A subset of 25 survey participants with a history of sexual victimization also engaged in qualitative interviews about their experience of violence. Primary quantitative findings indicate that sexual stigma significantly predicts a greater likelihood of reporting an experience of sexual violence among bisexual people, and to a lesser degree, lesbian people. Qualitative findings support the development of a theoretical model that describes how intersectional experiences of marginalization across individual, interpersonal, and societal levels interact to increase vulnerability for sexual violence.
引用
收藏
页码:232 / 245
页数:14
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