Gender role attitudes, awareness and experiences of non-consensual sex among university students in Shanghai, China
Adult
Male
China
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Adolescent
Universities
Gender roles
Young Adult
5. Gender equality
Non-consensual sex
Social Norms
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Students
10. No inequality
Crime Victims
Internet
Sex Characteristics
Research
4. Education
Sex Offenses
05 social sciences
Victimization
Gender Identity
Gynecology and obstetrics
Awareness
16. Peace & justice
Health Surveys
University students
3. Good health
Cross-Sectional Studies
Sexual Harassment
RG1-991
Perception
Female
DOI:
10.1186/s12978-018-0491-x
Publication Date:
2018-03-15T13:23:56Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Non-consensual sex (NCS) among young people, an important subject with public health and human rights implications, was less studied in China. This study is to investigate the NCS awareness and victimization of university students in Shanghai, China and whether they were associated with adolescent gender-role attitudes.Gender-role attitudes, awareness and victimization of different forms of NCS were examined among 1099 undergraduates (430 males and 669 females) in four universities in Shanghai using computer-assisted self-interview approach.University students held relatively egalitarian attitude to gender roles. Gender difference existed that girls desired to be more equal in social status and resource sharing while more endorsed the submissiveness for women in sexual interaction than boys. They held low vigilance on the risk of various forms of NCS, with the mean score on perception of NCS among boys (5.67) lower than that among girls (6.37). Boys who adhered to traditional gender norms were less likely to aware the nature of NCS (β = - 0.6107, p = 0.0389). Compared with boys, higher proportion of girls had been the victims of verbal harassment, unwanted touch, fondling, and penetrative sexual intercourse. Multivariable analysis revealed that girls who held more traditional gender-role attitudes were more vulnerable to physical NCS (OR = 1.41, p = 0.0558).The weakening but still existing traditional gender norms had contributions in explaining the gender difference on the low vigilance of NCS and higher prevalence of victimization among university students in Shanghai, China. Interventions should be taken to challenge the traditional gender norms in individual and structural level, and promote the society to understand the nature of NCS better as well as enhance negotiation skills of adolescents and young people that prevent them from potentially risky situations or relationships.
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