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Sexual Coercion Experience and Sexually Coercive Behavior: A Population Study of Swedish and Norwegian Male Youth

NCJ Number
231518
Journal
Child Maltreatment Volume: 15 Issue: 3 Dated: August 2010 Pages: 219-228
Author(s)
Michael C. Seto; Cecilia Kjellgren; Gisela Priebe; Svein Mossige; Carl Goran Svedin; Niklas Langstrom
Date Published
August 2010
Length
10 pages
Annotation
This study examined the relationship between sexual coercion experiences and sexually coercive behavior in a sample of male students.
Abstract
The authors tested the hypothesis that experiencing sexual coercion and engaging in sexually coercive behavior are positively associated in a representative sample totaling almost 4,000 Swedish or Norwegian male high school students (estimated response rate 80 percent). In both surveys, youths who had experienced sexual coercion were approximately three times more likely to engage in sexually coercive behavior than those without such experience (10-12 percent vs. 4 percent). The association between sexual coercion experience and sexually coercive behavior was attenuated but remained significant and moderately strong in both surveys when controlling for nonsexual antisocial behavior, substance use, and noncoercive sexual behavior in multivariate logistic regression models. The population attributable fraction (proportion of sexually coercive behavior that can be explained by sexual coercion experience) was 18-25 percent. The findings support a robust link between having been sexually coerced and engaging in coercive sexual behavior in the general population. Tables and references (Published Abstract)