An unprecedented look at college women's risks of and experiences with sexual victimization Unsafe in the Ivory Tower examines the nature and dimensions of a salient social problem—the sexual victimization of female college students today, and how women respond when they are, in fact, sexually victimized. The authors discuss the research that scholars have conducted to illuminate the origins and extent of this controversial issue as well as what can be done to prevent it. Students and other interested readers learn about the nature of victimization while simultaneously gaining an understanding of the ways in which criminologists, victimologists, and social scientists conduct research that informs theory and policy debates. Key Features Provides detailed information about sexual victimization on college campuses today Introduces broad lessons about the interactions of ideology, science and methodology, and public policy Integrates current data, research, and theory, based on the authors' national studies of more than 8,000 randomly selected female college students Intended Audience This supplemental text is ideal for courses such as Sex Crimes, Violence and Abuse, Victimology, Gender and Crime, Sociology of Violence, Sociology of Women, and the Sociology of Sex and Gender in departments of criminology, criminal justice, sociology, and women's studies. It is also useful for those involved in studying or creating public policy related to this issue and for those interested in sexual victimization on campuses generally.
This text presents two interrelated perspectives of sexual victimisation on college campuses.
Sex Crimes 3rd Ed + Unsafe in the Ivory Tower
(2007); and George F. Rengert, Mark T. Mattson, and Kristen D. Henderson, Campus Security: Situational Crime Prevention ... 13 See, for example, Samuel G. McQuade, Understanding and Managing Cybercrime (Boston: Pearson Education, 2006).
Beyond Blurred Lines traces ways that sexual violence is collectively processed, mediated, negotiated, and contested by exploring public reactions to high-profile incidents and rape narratives in popular culture.
Others identify Lola Baldwin as the first female police officer. Appointed in 1905 in Portland, Oregon, Baldwin was given a temporary assignment with the Department of Public Safety for the Protection of Young Girls and Women.
Data similar to Koss's was affirmed in 2009's Unsafe in the Ivory Tower,8 which suggested that 20-25 percent of college women were likely to experience an attempted or completed ...
Koss et al., “The Scope of Rape”; Bonnie S. Fisher, Leah E. Daigle, and Francis T. Cullen, Unsafe in the Ivory Tower: The Sexual Victimization of College Women (Los Angeles: Sage, 2010), 2. 128. For example, Fisher et al. found that, ...
... 2014) and Unsafe in the Ivory Tower: The Sexual Victimization of College Women (2010), which was awarded the 2011 ... including the Encyclopedia of Victimology and Crime Prevention (2010); The Dark Side of the Ivory Tower: Campus ...
Emphasizing the impact of trauma on individuals and opportunities for prevention, this supportive text offers incisive discussions of recurring victimization and the victim-offender overlap with a global focus.
101; The Dark Side of the Ivory Tower, op. cit., pp. 75–77. 42. Ibid., The Dark Side of the Ivory Tower. 43. Fisher, et al., op. cit., p. 187. 44. Fisher and Sloan, Campus Crime: Legal, Social, and Policy Perspectives, op. cit., p. 95.