Public perceptions of marital rape: does level of force used have an impact?
- Leanne Hanney,
- Amy Shelford,
- Andy Guppy
- Arden University
Open access
Sustainable Development Goals
- SDG 5 Gender Equality
- SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Abstract
Research indicates that marital rape is viewed by the public as less harmful to a victim than stranger/acquaintance rape. The aim of the study is to extend the research conducted by Robinson in 2017, investigating how levels of force influence perceptions of marital rape. The study also examines how rape perception is influenced by rape myth acceptance and attitudes towards women. The current study improves on previous work by controlling for individual differences across groups using a repeated-measures design. The results indicate that as the level of force increases the perception of marital rape increases. Positive attitudes towards women and low rape myth acceptance are also found to have a positive impact on perceptions of marital rape. Based on these findings, it is possible to recommend that further awareness of legislation regarding coercion and marital rape is required within the public domain.
Publication Information
Output type
Original language
EnglishPages from-to (Number of pages)
Pages 224-234 (11 pages)Journal (Volume, Issue Number)
Behavioral Sciences and the Law (Volume 44, Issue 2)Publication milestones
- Accepted/In press - 19/12/2025
- E-pub ahead of print - 10/01/2026
- Published - 10/01/2026
Publication status
ISSN
0735-3936External Publication IDs
- PubMed: 41518065
- Scopus: 105027027715
