NCJ Number
89699
Journal
Journal of Sex Research Volume: 19 Issue: 1 Dated: (February 1983) Pages: 74-93
Date Published
1983
Length
20 pages
Annotation
A community's rape problem will not be ameliorated by reducing average sex disparities in sociopolitical and economic terms.
Abstract
This study tested a major component of the feminist explanation for rape: that such criminal behavior is most fundamentally the result of traditions of male domination in most sociopolitical and economic affairs. The rape rates of 26 large American cities were compared, using both official FBI and victimization statistics, relative to various indicators of these cities' degree of sociopolitical and economic inequalities between the sexes. Out of 14 correlations, 4 were significant, 3 with a sign opposite to that predicated by the feminist explanation. When presumed effects of the two strongest control variables were removed, using partial correlation techniques, only one coefficient was significant, and it was in the direction contrary to the feminist explanation. Generally, rape rates appear to be unrelated to sex disparities in earnings, education, occupational prestige, or employment. Tables, 1 reference note, and about 55 references are provided. (Author abstract modified)