ABSTRACT

Rape: Challenging Contemporary Thinking – 10 Years On takes stock of current thinking and research about rape and the way it is handled in practice within the criminal justice system, as well as challenging some of the widely held but inaccurate beliefs about rape.

The second edition of Rape: Challenging Contemporary Thinking – 10 Years On is not a traditional new edition, although it does provide updated versions of substantive issues covered in the first edition. Bringing the book to the cutting edge, it incorporates both old and new contexts where sexual exploitation takes place, identifying some knowledge gaps especially when considering the voices of complainants/victims/survivors who are invisible or muted, numerous new areas of research including the implications arising from #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, the limitations of our present criminal justice systems, and radical alternatives to closing the justice gap. The new book reflects the global reach of research and thinking about rape, including more international coverage, with material from India, the US, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand as well as the UK. In order to learn from our shared history in this field, two authors reflect on their careers and other authors were encouraged to move away from conventional academic formats to convey their stories. Bringing together leading researchers in the field of psychology, sociology, and law, considering new research, and presenting new data from a strong theoretical and contextual base, the chapters are provocative and engage in innovative thinking, whilst remaining grounded in the available evidence.

This book is essential reading for students of criminology, forensic psychology, sociology, criminal justice, law, media studies, and women’s/gender studies. It also aims to inform professionals engaged in the investigation, prosecution of rape, support, and preventative services.

part I|42 pages

Introduction

chapter 21|9 pages

Setting the Scene

The Challenges of Researching Rape

chapter 2|16 pages

Revisiting Emotionally Involved

The Impact of Researching Rape. Twenty Years (and Thousands of Stories) Later

chapter 3|15 pages

Overcoming “Othering”

Reflections on Researching Police Responses to Victims of Sexual Violence

part II|68 pages

Experiences of rape

chapter 5|16 pages

Race, Gender, and Policing

How to Increase Sexual Abuse Reporting by British South Asian Women

chapter 6|15 pages

Power, Hierarchies, and Higher Education

Rape on Campus in India and the UK

chapter 7|18 pages

Rape of Older People

part III|62 pages

Concepts and processes

chapter 1128|15 pages

Rape in the News

Contemporary Challenges

chapter 9|15 pages

Pornography and Sexual Violence

Reflection on Policy Debates Around Age, Gender, and Harm

chapter 10|16 pages

Technology-Facilitated Sexual Violence

Reflections on the Concept

chapter 11|14 pages

Modern Myths About Sexual Aggression

New Methods and Findings

part IV|46 pages

No such thing as justice when it comes to rape?

part V|75 pages

What can be done? Thoughts on prevention, activism, and justice