Violence Knows No Gender on Campus
Physical and emotional violence on college campuses knows no gender bias, according to a recently released study covered by Inside Higher Ed.
Based on a survey of 2,000 students who visited health clinics at five universities in Wisconsin, Seattle, and Vancouver during the 2006-07 academic year, the study shows that nearly equal rates of young men and young women (17 and 16 percent, respectively) interviewed at the clinics reported experiencing violence during the previous six months.
The study, published online in the Journal of Adolescent Health, found that men reported the highest incidence of physical abuse, while women reported the highest rates of emotional abuse. It also found that men suffered abuse most frequently at the hands of their friends, roommates, or acquaintances, while women reported physical abuse at the hands of a family member three times more often than men.
Elizabeth M. Saewyc, a nursing professor at the University of British Columbia and the study's lead researcher, says the findings surprised her. She "wasn't quite expecting the rate of violence to be as high," she said.
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Reader Comments
Tell me again WHY
it is that college students have "roommates" at all, especially ones they did not choose and do not really know.
Yeah, yeah. Cost savings---at YOUR expense in study distraction. Violence at the hands of a roommate in an institution you're paying to attend? C'mon. How crazy is that?
Make the room half as big and put one person in it. Same with prison cells and hospital rooms. This tradition of bunking with strangers because some incorporated entity said to do so is nuts, you know.
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