Abstract

There is rising attention in Italy and Europe to the occurrence, consequences, and factors related to sexual violence. The focus on women as the primary victims of sexual violence has, however, left data collection and research on young men and sexual minorities in the background. Moreover, young people’s experiences of sexual abuse in the context of their relationships with peers are hardly recognised as a policy concern. The ultimate aim of this paper is to disentangle intersectionalities between gender, migration background, sexual orientation, and sexual experience in shaping the risk of experiencing sexual violence among university students in Italy.We use data from the Sexual and Emotional LiFe of Youths (SELFY) survey carried out in Italy in 2017. Our data confirm that women and foreign-born students are at higher risk of sexual violence. Our data also support previous evidence that bisexual women are at a higher risk of sexual violence victimisation compared with peer students with other sexual orientations. Previous same-sex sexual experience is more relevant than sexual orientation in shaping the risk. The effect is gendered: the risk of sexual violence is lower for women with previous same-sex sexual experience compared with their male peers. The intersection between gender, sexual orientation, and same-sex sexual experience generate specific high-risk profiles whose needs should be targeted by support services.

Highlights

  • There is rising attention in Italy and Europe to the occurrence, consequences, and factors related to sexual violence

  • We focus on university students providing evidence on the self-declared experience of Sexual violence victimisation (SVV), using data collected in Italy in 2017 from approximately 7800 respondents in the framework of the Sexual and Emotional LiFe of Youths (SELFY) project (Dalla Zuanna, Caltabiano, Minello, & Vignoli, 2019)

  • If we consider the self-declared sexual orientation, 6.9% of homosexual students and 19.5% bisexual students report at least an episode of SVV

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There is rising attention in Italy and Europe to the occurrence, consequences, and factors related to sexual violence. Ortensi and Farina Genus (2020) 76:30 that SVV is strongly age-dependent, with young adults and teenagers being more at risk (Sinozich & Langton, 2014; List, 2013; Ngo, Veliz, Kusunoki, Stein, & Boyd, 2018; Martin-Storey et al, 2018; ISTAT, 2016; Kubicek, 2018). For this reason, a relevant stream in SVV-related literature focuses on university students (Fedina, Holmes, & Backes, 2016; Wiersma-Mosley & Jozkowski, 2019). The lack of comprehensive, high-quality data is recurrent in exploring young adults’ experiences of sexual abuse in the context of their relationships with peers (Romito, Beltramini, & EscribàAgüir, 2013; STIR- Safeguarding Teenage Intimate Relationships, 2016)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call