Examples of Forcible Rape in the following topics:
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- With the exception of rape (which accounts for 6% of all reported violent crimes), males are the primary victims of all forms of violent crime.
- The United States Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) counts five categories of crime as violent crimes: murder, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault.
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- The United States Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) counts five categories of crime as violent crimes: murder, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault.
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- Definitions of rape and consent have evolved over time.
- Rape can cause devastating physical and psychological trauma.
- Often, victims blame themselves for rape.
- Although self-blame might seem like an unusual, intensely individual response to rape, it is rooted in social conceptions of rape and victimhood.
- The medieval concept of rape did not allow for the possibility of being raped by one's husband.
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- The most commonly discussed form of sexual violence is rape.
- Forms of sexual violence include: rape by strangers, marital rape, date rape, war rape, unwanted sexual harassment, demanding sexual favors, sexual abuse of children, sexual abuse of disabled individuals, forced marriage, child marriage, denial of the right to use contraception, denial of the right to take measures to protect against sexually-transmitted diseases, forced abortion, genital mutilation, forced circumcision, and forced prostitution.
- This can be seen most clearly when considering war rape and prison rape.
- War rape is the type of sexual pillaging that occurs in the aftermath of a war, typically characterized by the male soldiers of the victorious military raping the women of the towns they have just taken over.
- Prison rape is the type of rape that is common (and seriously under reported) in prisons all over the world, including the United States, in which inmates will force sex upon one another as a demonstration of power.
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- However, fewer than 5% of people raped on college campuses report their sexual assault to law enforcement, which suggests the numbers in the figure may be substantially higher than the figure reports.
- Further, official figures like the one below limit their reporting to "forcible sexual assault" despite mounting evidence that the vast majority of sexual assaults on college campuses do not fit this narrow definition, and typically involve more subtle forms of sexual violence and coercion.
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- Another telling crime statistic that is traditionally seen as highlighting power imbalances is the number of rapes in society.
- While the focus of this chapter is not on exploring the motivations behind rape, the number of rapes in the U.S. and internationally can be seen to reflect power imbalances between men and women as men are far more likely to rape women than vice versa.
- The figures below and to the right show that rape rates in the U.S. have declined in recent years and also compare rape rates from select countries around the world.
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- Examples of formal deviance include robbery, theft, rape, murder, and assault.
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- Examples of formal deviance would include: robbery, theft, rape, murder, and assault, just to name a few.
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- The "tragic" contradiction between romance and society is most forcibly portrayed in literature, such as in Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, in Flaubert's Madame Bovary, and William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
- The "tragic" contradiction between romance and society is most forcibly portrayed in literature, in Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, in Flaubert's Madame Bovary, and William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
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- Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as deportations of protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the Occupying Power or to that of any other country, occupied or not, are prohibited, regardless of their motive. ...