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“I thought I’m better off just trying to put this behind me” : a contemporary approach to understanding why women decide not to report sexual violence Sophie Stewart, Dominic Willmott, Anthony Murphy and Catherine Phillips

By: Stewart, Sophie.
Contributor(s): Willmott, Dominic | Murphy, Anthony | Phillips, Catherine.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2023Subject(s): CRIMINAL JUSTICE | DISCLOSURE | SEXUAL VIOLENCE | VICTIM/SURVIVORS' VOICES | VICTIMS OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE | INTERNATIONAL | UNITED KINDGOMOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/14789949.2023.2292103 (Open access) In: The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, 2023, First published online, 7 December 2023Summary: Sexual offence disclosures are on the rise, thought to be the result of growing numbers of prosecutions brought against well-known public figures and mobilisation of movements such as #MeToo. Despite this, data continue to indicate that most victim-survivors will never report their abuse. This study aimed to explore why women continue to decide not to report sexual assault to the police. Secondary data were collated and analysed, pertaining to survivor accounts of sexual assault, posted in response to a prominent online video entitled ‘Women Tell Us Why They Didn’t Report Their Sexual Assault’. Thematic analysis revealed three main themes regarding why women chose not to report: (1) Lack of faith in the Criminal Justice System (encompassing two sub-themes, no evidence and traumatisation of reporting), (2) Self-blame, and (3) Knowing the perpetrator. Practical applications and reforms concerning empathic police responses and CJS improvements surrounding timeliness, case progression, and conviction rates are discussed. (Authors' abstract). Record #8494
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The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology, 2023, First published online, 7 December 2023

Sexual offence disclosures are on the rise, thought to be the result of growing numbers of prosecutions brought against well-known public figures and mobilisation of movements such as #MeToo. Despite this, data continue to indicate that most victim-survivors will never report their abuse. This study aimed to explore why women continue to decide not to report sexual assault to the police. Secondary data were collated and analysed, pertaining to survivor accounts of sexual assault, posted in response to a prominent online video entitled ‘Women Tell Us Why They Didn’t Report Their Sexual Assault’. Thematic analysis revealed three main themes regarding why women chose not to report: (1) Lack of faith in the Criminal Justice System (encompassing two sub-themes, no evidence and traumatisation of reporting), (2) Self-blame, and (3) Knowing the perpetrator. Practical applications and reforms concerning empathic police responses and CJS improvements surrounding timeliness, case progression, and conviction rates are discussed. (Authors' abstract). Record #8494