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Alliance: Factsheets: Sexual Victimization of Youth in New York City


Factsheets: Sexual Victimization of Youth in New York City

Research published over the last decade has explored the incidence, prevalence, and consequences of sexual victimization of youth, including attempted and/or completed rape, sexual coercion and harassment, child sexual abuse, and sexual contact with force or threat of force within adolescent acquaintance and dating relationships. Current research reveals that adolescents are more likely to experience sexually violent crimes than any other age group. In New York City, one study found that approximately one in four young women ages 14 to 23 experienced an unwanted sexual experience in the past year (Rickert, Wiemann et al. 2004). These findings reveal the urgent need to address the risk factors for experiencing sexual violence, to understand the health and psychosocial implications of victimization, and to increase resources for preventing violence among youth in New York City.

This fact sheet focuses entirely on quantitative studies conducted in New York City.

1) Extent of the Problem of Sexual Violence Among Youth in NYC: Incidence, Prevalence and Nature

2) Health-related Outcomes Associated with Sexual Violence Among Youth in NYC


Source: NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

3) Risk Factors Associated with Sexual Violence Among Youth in NYC

Current Research

Researchers at the New York City Alliance Against Sexual Assault and the Columbia University Center for Youth Violence Prevention currently are conducting a survey about teens’ experiences of sexual and dating violence. The purpose of this study is to further understand how young people develop healthy relationships, as well as how they resolve disagreements and conflict in their dating relationships. Moreover, this study will reveal critical information about prevalence and perpetrators of sexual violence against youth. Conflict and violence, including sexual violence, in dating relationships is a significant problem in our city, and many young people identify schools and health services as places where they would like to learn more about healthy relationships and dating problems. Four New York City high schools are participating in this survey, which was designed to learn more about this problem. The survey findings will help health care professionals and educators design prevention programs for teen sexual and dating violence.

Future Research Needs

In discussions with high schools participating in the survey, several school staff members advised the Alliance of the importance of youth involvement in further Alliance research, program planning, and efforts to develop intervention and prevention initiatives. In order to develop skills among youth and increase their participation, the Alliance will convene a time-limited Youth Advisory Council that will function as a youth development and empowerment project. This project aims to teach youth about research methods and get feedback on how to continue to gain information about sexual violence among youth, while simultaneously providing youth with information and skills.

Future research also is needed to better understand male peer norms which encourage the acceptance of sexual violence against women, and the extent to which that acceptance does or does not lead to behaviors including increased violence, decreased reporting, greater apathy. Participatory action research (PAR) is a research method that brings together researchers and community members so that they can work together to identify problems faced by the community, to empower community members to research and create solutions to those problems, and to improve conditions in the community. PAR in this area can help develop and encourage bystander interventions to prevent sexual violence and shift gender norms away from acceptance of violence against women. There, too, is a research need for information on how sexual violence victimization among male youth differs from that among females. More comprehensive and sexual-violence focused research is needed to enhance the data we already have on both NYC youth overall and by borough, so we can better understand the burden of sexual violence among NYC youth and develop more effective, community-specific intervention programs.

References

CDC, Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System, Youth Online. Accessed October 24, 2006 from http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/yrbss/QuestYearTable.asp?
cat=1&quest=Q21&loc=NYC&year=Trend.

Clatts, M. C., L. Goldsamt, et al. (2005). "Homelessness and drug abuse among young men who have sex with men in New York city: A preliminary epidemiological trajectory." Journal of Adolescence 28(2): 201-214.

Freudenberg, N., L. Roberts, et al. (1999). "Coming Up in the Boogie Down: The Role of Violence in the Lives of Adolescents in the South Bronx." Health Educ Behav 26(6): 782-799. Molnar, B. E., S. B. Shade, et al. (1998). "Suicidal behavior and sexual/physical abuse among street youth." Child Abuse Negl 22(3): 213-22.

Rickert, V. I., V. Brietbart, et al. (2006). "The role of dating violence in condom use at last sex among adolescent and young adult females." Journal of Adolescent Health 38(2): 122-122.

Rickert, V. I., C. M. Wiemann, et al. (2005). "Disclosure of Date/Acquaintance Rape: Who Reports and When." Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology 18(1): 17-24. Rickert, V. I., C. M. Wiemann, et al. (2004). "Rates and risk factors for sexual violence among an ethnically diverse sample of adolescents." Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 158(12): 1132-9.

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Copyright © 2000-2007 by The New York City Alliance Against Sexual Assault

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