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Journal Article

Citation

Kettrey HH, Marx RA, Tanner-Smith EE. Campbell Syst. Rev. 2019; 15(1-2): e1013.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, The Authors, Publisher John Wiley and Sons with the Campbell Collaboration)

DOI

10.4073/csr.2019.1

PMID

37131477

PMCID

PMC8356505

Abstract

Bystander programs increase bystander intervention but no effect on perpetrating sexual assault

Bystander sexual assault prevention programs have beneficial effects on bystander intervention but there is no evidence of effects on sexual assault perpetration. Effects on knowledge and attitudes are inconsistent across outcomes.
What is this review about?

Sexual assault is a significant problem among adolescents and college students across the world. One promising strategy for preventing these assaults is the implementation of bystander sexual assault prevention programs, which encourage young people to intervene when witnessing incidents or warning signs of sexual assault. This review examines the effects bystander programs have on knowledge and attitudes concerning sexual assault and bystander behavior, bystander intervention when witnessing sexual assault or its warning signs, and participants' rates of perpetration of sexual assault.



What is the aim of this review?

This Campbell systematic review examines the effects of bystander programs on knowledge and attitudes concerning sexual assault and bystander intervention, bystander intervention when witnessing sexual assault or its warning signs, and the perpetration of sexual assault. The review summarizes evidence from 27 high-quality studies, including 21 randomized controlled trials.


Language: en

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