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Policing and Society
An International Journal of Research and Policy
Volume 30, 2020 - Issue 4
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Articles

The unheard victims: gender, policing and sexual violence

Pages 412-428 | Received 11 Jun 2018, Accepted 18 Oct 2018, Published online: 24 Oct 2018
 

ABSTRACT

72,000 men in England and Wales are victims of sexual violence each year. While sexual violence against men is slowly becoming recognised as a sociological and criminological issue because victims are steadily coming forward due to changes in policy and practice, gradually improving the reporting rate that causes sociologists and criminologists to take notice of a necessity to address the issue, there still however remains a noticeable gap regarding the context, contours, and consequences of policing male rape within England. This paper makes some attempt to fill in this lacuna, using data including police officers who completed in-depth interviews and qualitative questionnaires (53 officers in total). This article focuses on several themes that emerged from the data, such as police insensitivity/secondary victimisation; police treatment of male rape; and police training, inter alia. It explores police officers’ level of comprehension relating to the topic of male rape and, in turn, evaluates police training (or lack thereof) provided to help with understanding male rape. It considers the implications of poor police practice with regards to male rape. The results show that there are some police discourses that suggest that only women can be victims of sexual violence, not men, shaping how some officers think about and respond to male rape victims in practice.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1 Specially Trained Officer.

2 ‘Stranger rape’ typically refers to a stranger raping a victim, a victim who had no knowledge about the offender prior to the attack.

3 ‘Date rape’ (also known as ‘acquaintance rape’) is a type of rape perpetrated by someone known to the victim.

4 Police discretion is defined as the decision-making power afforded to police officers that enables them to decide if they want to pursue police procedure, usually based upon judgment.

5 A Specialist Police Officer is a Police officer who has undergone specific training in the handling of rape and/or sexual assault cases.

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