NCJ Number
233874
Journal
Crime &Delinquency Volume: 53 Issue: 2 Dated: April 2011 Pages: 219-254
Date Published
April 2007
Length
36 pages
Annotation
This study examined the safety of women on college and university campuses.
Abstract
Using data from a spring 2004 telephone survey of 1,010 female undergraduate and graduate students at 1 southeastern State university, the authors examine the objective and subjective experiences with sexual assault or coercion, physical assault, and stalking among college women, paying particular attention to whether actual victimization experiences while in college coincide with cognitive assessments of campus risk, emotionally based worry about crime, and fear-related precautionary behavior. Furthermore, the authors explore whether these interrelationships might be perpetrator specific, focusing on differences in risk perception, worry, or precautionary behavior across acquaintance versus stranger-perpetrated victimization experiences. Results suggest that there is a loose coupling between actual victimization and subjective crime experiences. Implications for how colleges and universities publicly report crime and victimization, as mandated by the Clery Act, are discussed in light of these findings. (Published Abstract) Tables, figures, appendix, notes, and references