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Pornography Viewing among Fraternity Men: Effects on Bystander Intervention, Rape Myth Acceptance and Behavioral Intent to Commit Sexual Assault

NCJ Number
239116
Journal
Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity Volume: 18 Issue: 4 Dated: October-December 2011 Pages: 212-231
Author(s)
John D. Foubert; Matthew W. Brosi; R. Sean Bannon
Date Published
December 2011
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This study examined college men's exposure to pornography.
Abstract
College men's exposure to pornography is nearly universal, with growing viewing rates nationwide. Substantial research documents the harmful effects of mainstream, sadomasochistic, and rape pornography on men's attitudes and behavior related to sexual assault. The present study surveyed 62 percent of the fraternity population at a Midwestern public university on their pornography viewing habits, bystander efficacy, and bystander willingness to help in potential rape situations. Results showed that men who view pornography are significantly less likely to intervene as a bystander, report an increased behavioral intent to rape, and are more likely to believe rape myths. (Published Abstract)