Abstract

Stranger-perpetrated harassment was identified decades ago to describe the pervasive, unwanted sexual attention women experience in public spaces. This form of harassment, which has evolved in the modern era, targets women as they navigate online spaces, social media, texting, and online gaming. The present research explored university-aged women’s experiences (n = 381) with online male-perpetrated sexual harassment, including the nature and frequency of the harassment, how women responded to the harassment, and how men reportedly reacted to women’s strategies. Trends in harassment experiences are explored descriptively and with thematic analysis. Most women reported receiving sexually inappropriate messages (84%, n = 318), sexist remarks or comments (74%, n = 281), seductive behavior or come-ons (70%, n = 265), or unwanted sexual attention (64%, n = 245) in an online platform, social media account, email, or text message. This sexual attention from unknown males often began at a very young age (12-14 years). The harassment took many forms, including inappropriate sexual comments on social media posts, explicit photos of male genitalia, and solicitations for sex. Although most women reported strong negative emotional reactions to the harassment (disgust, fear, anger), they generally adopted non-confrontational strategies to deal with the harassment, electing to ignore/delete the content or blocking the offender. Women reported that some men nevertheless persisted with the harassment, following them across multiple sites online, escalating in intensity and severity, and leading some women to delete their own social media accounts. These results suggest the need for early intervention and education programs and industry response.

Highlights

  • Marie decides to unwind at the end of a long workday by scrolling through her Facebook account

  • Sexual harassment of women occurs on streets, sidewalks, bars, and campuses, but has evolved to occupy women’s online spaces as well, finding new ways to harass through social media, smartphones, and online gaming

  • We elected to survey university-aged women as this group constituted the very demographic we suspected to be at the highest risk of technology-facilitated sexual violence (TFSV) (Henry & Powell, 2018), and our results have demonstrated the high rates at which this group did experience online sexual harassment

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Summary

Introduction

Marie decides to unwind at the end of a long workday by scrolling through her Facebook account. A man she does not know, a friend of a friend, has posted an offensive sexual comment in response to her recent post about politics. She cringes, as her family, friends, and some coworkers see her Facebook posts. Angela is a university student who spends hours each day on her phone texting and using social media. She receives a text message from a male she does not know; the message contains a picture of a man’s genitalia with a request for her to send the same. She deletes the picture but remains shaken by the graphic invasion

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