Abstract

Recent legal and media reports of contemporary and historical rape and sexual assault cases have focused on the entertainment industry, particularly around the notion of the “casting couch.” This scenario, in which a powerful figure obtains sometimes nonconsensual sexual acts from subordinate actors in exchange for employment, was used to explore the influence of rape myths and Sexual Economics Theory on mock-juror decision-making. Participant-jurors (n = 907) viewed video and written testimony of a complainant, accusing a male producer of rape. Complainant gender (male, female), delay before reporting the incident to the police (immediately, 6 months, 10 years), and complainant casting in the production were randomly varied (acting role secured, not secured). The strongest effects were that females (79.7%) were significantly more likely than males (62.7%) to deliver a guilty verdict and to recommend longer prison sentences for the offence. When the complainant did not secure the acting role, and they delayed reporting the incident for six months, there was an interaction between complainant gender and verdict. No interacting complainant gender effects on trial outcomes were found in the other delay conditions, or when the actor secured employment. Defendant guilt attributions to the male and female complainant were also differently influenced by rape myth belief levels and homophobic attitudes, but not beliefs in a just world. The casting couch euphemism, reported worldwide, suggests industry acceptance, and may sanitize the act of demanding sex and even committing rape. However, these results have important implications for any occupational setting in which men in positions of power may sexually exploit junior staff.

Highlights

  • Journal of Interpersonal Violence reporting the incident for six months, there was an interaction between complainant gender and verdict

  • The “casting couch” cliché of a powerful man obtaining sexual acts from subordinate actors in exchange for employment has been in use for almost a century (Zimmer, 2017)

  • It is important that empirical research investigates potential biases of this type, and this research examined whether commonly reported features of the casting couch scenario might impact UK juror decision-making in alleged rape cases

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Summary

Introduction

Journal of Interpersonal Violence reporting the incident for six months, there was an interaction between complainant gender and verdict. They suggest that rape only happens to certain victims (i.e., those engaging in highrisk, low-morality lifestyles) This final myth is commonly linked to substance abuse and sex work (Grubb & Turner, 2012), and within the casting couch scenario might be interpreted as being an “occupational hazard,” if the actor is offered the desired role. In a date rape context, when a male pays for an expensive night, males—who tend to believe rape myths more than females—place significantly less blame on the rapist than dates where the cost is split or the date is cheap (e.g., Davies et al, 2012; McGee et al, 2011) Females show no such distinction, and these gender effects are independent of rape myth acceptance levels

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