Home Up Feedback Contents Search Consultancy

                        

 

Home Up Campaigns Criminology Diversity Justice System Police Practitioners Prisons Probation Restorative Justice Weblogs FAQs


November 22, 2005: Widespread Public Ignorance Of Rape

A new ICM opinion poll commissioned by Amnesty International indicates that a third (34%) of people in the UK believe that a woman is partially or totally responsible for being raped if she has behaved in a flirtatious manner. The poll, ‘Sexual Assault Research’, published as part of Amnesty International’s ‘Stop Violence Against Women’ campaign, shows that similar “blame culture” attitudes exist over clothing, drinking, perceived promiscuity, personal safety and whether a woman has clearly said “no” to the man.

For instance, more than a quarter (26%) of those asked said that they thought a women was partially or totally responsible for being raped if she was wearing sexy or revealing clothing, and more than one in five (22%) held the same view if a woman had had many sexual partners. Around one in 12 people (8%) believed that a woman was totally responsible for being raped if she’d had many sexual partners. Similarly, more than a quarter of people (30%) said that a woman was partially or totally responsible for being raped if she was drunk, and more than a third (37%) held the same view if the woman had failed to clearly say “no” to the man.

Changes in the law relating to consent mean that an alleged rapist must show that they had taken reasonable steps to ensure that the other person had consented to sex. In this respect the poll exposes a gap between the law and public attitudes.

ICM interviewed a random sample of 1,095 adults aged 18+ by telephone on 7-9 October 2005. Interviews were conducted across the country and the results have been weighted to the profile of adults.

The poll also shows that the vast majority of the British population has no idea how many women are raped every year in the UK, with 96% of those polled saying they either didn’t know the true extent of rape or that they thought it was far lower than the true figure. The British Crime Survey 2001 indicates that there were at least 47,000 female victims of rape in England and Wales in 2000. his figure did not include Scotland or Northern Ireland and did not take account of legislation (Sexual Offences Act 2003) broadening the definition from anal/vaginal penetration to include oral penetration.

  • Only 4% of respondents even thought the number of women raped exceeds 10,000 per year when the true figure is likely to be well in excess of 50,000.
  • Six out of seven people either said they didn’t know that only 5.6% of rapes reported to the police currently result in conviction or believed the conviction rate to be far higher.
  • The average estimate was of a 26% conviction rate, nearly five times higher than the actual rate.

Amnesty International's UK Director Kate Allen stated:

“This poll shows that a disturbingly large proportion of the public blame women themselves for being raped.It is shocking that so many people will lay the blame for being raped at the feet of women themselves and the government must launch a new drive to counteract this sexist ‘blame culture’.”

“In addition to uncovering disturbing attitudes over women being ‘to blame’, this poll also reveals the scale of public ignorance of the unacceptably high numbers of women raped every year in the UK as well as the dreadfully low conviction rates.

“The government has an international duty to prevent this gross human rights violation yet it’s clear that the government’s policies on tackling rape are failing and failing badly.These findings should act as a wake-up call to the government to urgently tackle the triple problem of the high incidence of rape, low conviction rates and a sexist blame culture.”

South Essex Rape and Incest Crisis Centre Director Sheila Coates said:

“This poll shows that people don’t realise how common rape actually is and that there’s little understanding of how many people rape crisis groups actually support. Groups like ours are picking up an ever increasing number of helpline calls and waiting lists are growing. The situation for rape victims and women’s specialist sexual violence services are at critical. Those needing counselling face waiting lists of up to one year and this can only get worse as more rape crisis groups close or cut back services due to a lack of funding and government support. This situation has forced victims into a post code lottery when trying to find support.”

Amnesty International’s poll comes ahead of a new call on government later this week from a coalition of women’s organisations, Amnesty International and the TUC for an integrated government strategy to combating violence against women in all its forms in the UK, including sexual assault.

Return to Top


News Archives Index

Latest News

April 26, 2008: Probation Service "At Breaking Point", Says New Research

April 25, 2008: Some Crime Is Falling: It's Official

April 25, 2008: Prison Population Breaks Record

April 14, 2008: Prison Self Injury Rate Growing - Howard League

April 4, 2008: New Corporate Manslaughter Law

April 2, 2008: More Specialist Domestic Violence Court Systems

April 1, 2008: Academics Challenge Crime Research Governance

March 17, 2008: 16, 2007: More Cash For Prison Drug Treatment

March 17, 2008: Sentencing Crisis, Says Napo

March 6, 2008: ID Cards: On The Way

February 28, 2008: Community Sentences Reduce Reoffending, Says Straw

February 8, 2008: Straw Supports Community Sentences

February 1, 2008: First New Public Prison In A Decade

January 31, 2008: Penal Policy Reform

January 1, 2008: Prison Suicides Rise

December 29, 2007: Prison Recalls Out Of Control, Says Napo

December 28, 2007: Offenders Do 6m Hours Of Work

December 20, 2007: Howard League Welcomes Inquiry

December 19, 2007: The Public & Tackling Offenders

December 12, 2007: Reviewing The Law On Murder

December 6, 2007: Napo On The Carter Report

December 6, 2007: Carter Report And New 'Titan' Prisons

December 6, 2007: Prison Reform Trust On Carter

December 4, 2007: Imprisoning Women Costs Us All

 

Back ] Home ] Up ] Next ]

Send mail to CrimLinks with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2004 CrimLinks
Last modified: 04/30/08