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A systematic review of primary prevention strategies for sexual violence perpetration Sarah DeGue, Linda Anne Valle, Melissa K. Holt, Greta M. Massetti, Jennifer L. Matjasko, Andra Teten Tharp

By: DeGue, Sarah A.
Contributor(s): Valle, Linda A | Holt, Melissa K | Massetti, Greta M | Matjasko, Jennifer L | Tharp, Andra T.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Aggression and Violent Behavior.Publisher: Elsevier, 2014Subject(s): EVALUATION | PERPETRATORS | PRIMARY PREVENTION | RAPE | SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS | SEXUAL VIOLENCEOnline resources: Read the abstract | Read key findings report | Listen to podcast In: Aggression and Violent Behavior, 2014, 19(4}; 346–362Summary: "This systematic review examined 140 outcome evaluations of primary prevention strategies for sexual violence perpetration. The review had two goals: 1) to describe and assess the breadth, quality, and evolution of evaluation research in this area; and 2) to summarise the best available research evidence for sexual violence prevention practitioners by categorising programmes with regard to their evidence of effectiveness on sexual violence behavioural outcomes in a rigorous evaluation." (from the authors' abstract). This systematic review was conducted by researchers at the US Centers for Disease Control. A key fingings report based on this systematic review has been produced by National Sexual Violence Research Center (NSVRC). It is freely available in PDF and TXT formats - follow the key findings report link to download in either format. A podcast about this research by lead author Sarah DeGue is also available.
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Aggression and Violent Behavior, 2014, 19(4}; 346–362

"This systematic review examined 140 outcome evaluations of primary prevention strategies for sexual violence perpetration. The review had two goals: 1) to describe and assess the breadth, quality, and evolution of evaluation research in this area; and 2) to summarise the best available research evidence for sexual violence prevention practitioners by categorising programmes with regard to their evidence of effectiveness on sexual violence behavioural outcomes in a rigorous evaluation." (from the authors' abstract). This systematic review was conducted by researchers at the US Centers for Disease Control. A key fingings report based on this systematic review has been produced by National Sexual Violence Research Center (NSVRC). It is freely available in PDF and TXT formats - follow the key findings report link to download in either format. A podcast about this research by lead author Sarah DeGue is also available.