Abstract
This study explores the communication used by survivors after they have experienced an incident of sexual victimization. Specifically, it examines sexual victimization survivors’ criteria for disclosure through the lens of communication privacy management theory. Participants completed an online questionnaire in which they described their first disclosure incident. Qualitative analysis of these incidents illustrated survivors’ reasons for disclosing, anxieties during disclosure and the power the recipient often has in shaping the outcome of the disclosure event. These findings may be used to aid future survivors and recipients of this high-risk disclosure.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Roseann Pluretti
Roseann Pluretti (M.A., The College at Brockport, 2013) is a doctoral student in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Kansas.
Joseph L. Chesebro
Joseph L. Chesebro (Ed.D., West Virginia University, 1999) is an associate professor at the Department of Communication at the The College at Brockport.