In their own words: sophomore college men describe attitude and behavior changes resulting from a rape prevention program 2 years after their participation
- PMID: 20040715
- DOI: 10.1177/0886260509354881
In their own words: sophomore college men describe attitude and behavior changes resulting from a rape prevention program 2 years after their participation
Abstract
The study conducted involved assessing students from a Southeastern public university during two academic years, after their participation in an all-male sexual assault peer education program. The study findings revealed that 79% of 184 college men reported attitude change, behavior change, or both. Furthermore, a multistage inductive analysis revealed that after seeing The Men's Program, men intervened to prevent rapes from happening. Participants also modified their behavior to avoid committing sexual assault when they or a potential partner were under the influence of alcohol. Implications for future research were discussed.
Comment in
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Commentary on Foubert, Godin, & Tatum (2010): the evolution of sexual violence prevention and the urgency for effectiveness.J Interpers Violence. 2011 Nov;26(16):3383-92; author reply 3393-402. doi: 10.1177/0886260510393010. Epub 2011 Feb 28. J Interpers Violence. 2011. PMID: 21362674
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