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Journal Article

Citation

Rich K, Seffrin P. Violence Vict. 2012; 27(2): 263-279.

Affiliation

Department of Social Work and Administrative Studies, Marywood University, USA. krich@maryu.marywood.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

22594220

Abstract

Sexual assault is underreported in the United States. Survivors are often reluctant to make police reports for various reasons; one is fear of revictimization by criminal justice professionals. Conversely, police officers often lack skills for interviewing crime victims. Posttraumatic stress reactions among victims can exacerbate the problem. Although some victims prefer female interviewers, it is not known whether they are more skilled. A sample of 429 police officers completed a written survey testing their rape myth acceptance and knowledge of how to interview rape reporters. A significant relationship between rape myth acceptance and interviewing skill was discovered. Although officer gender was related to interviewing skill, the effect was mediated by rape myth acceptance. Specific officer behaviors related to high rape myth acceptance were identified. Implications for selection of police to conduct victim interviews were discussed.


Language: en

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