Initiation, desistance, and persistence of men's sexual coercion |
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Authors: | Hall Gordon C Nagayama DeGarmo David S Eap Sopagna Teten Andra L Sue Stanley |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA. gnhall@uoregon.edu |
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Abstract: | Patterns of sexually coercive behavior were examined among 266 Asian American and 299 European American men over 1 year. Noncoercer (n = 358), desister (n = 120), initiator (n = 39), and persistent (n = 48) sexually coercive groups were identified. The strongest predictor of sexual coercion was past sexual coercion. Persistent sexual coercers were higher than the other groups in delinquency and hostile masculinity and were nearly twice as likely to engage in laboratory sexual harassment. Loss of face attenuated self-reported sexual coercion and laboratory sexual harassment risk among Asian Americans and attenuated only laboratory sexual harassment risk among European Americans. These findings suggest that the heterogeneity of sexually coercive behavior and ethnicity are important research and clinical considerations. |
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