Research on
pornography
Pornography's
Relationship To Rape and Aggression Toward Women
The Problem
- National Obscenity
Enforcement Unit of the U.S. Department of Justice
- Rape rate has climbed 43% in the last 10 years
(reported May 1988)
- The highest incidence of rape victims are
teenagers between the ages of 16 and 19
- Finkelhor (1979); Kanin
& Parcell (1977); Koss & Oros (1982)
"It has been
estimated that in the U.S. between one-fifth and one-fourth of the female
population is subjected to rape."
Nearly 45% of women in a San Francisco random sample reported that
they were subjected to at least one rape or attempted rape in their lifetime.
82% of the rapes were committed by non-strangers and 2/3 of the victims were
assaulted by acquaintances or friends
84%
of college students who were victims of completed rapes knew their assailant and
two thirds of them were assaulted by a date.
- Bureau of Justice
Statistics (1986)
The number of forcible rapes and the rates per
100,000 population doubled in the decade of the 60's and then doubles again in
the decade of the 70's -- the time of the "sexual revolution" in
America.
"The frequency of self-reported crimes" for the
non-incarcerated sex offenders they studied "was vastly greater than the
number of crimes for which they had been arrested. The ratio of arrest to
commission of the more violent crimes such as rape and child molestation was
approximately 1:30."
- Zillmann & Bryant
(1982); Zillman, in press
"Research has shown that as sexual
callousness grows in strength, rape is considered a lesser transgression."
There is a strong relationship between sexually callous
attitudes and histories of forceful, coercive, aggressive sexual conquests.
He
reported that two thirds of a sample of convicted rapists frequently fantasized
forcible sadistic acts.
- Storm (1981); Kelly &
Byrne (1978)
Symbolic events that are incorporated in masturbatory
fantasies and activities become closely associated with sexual excitement and
this association will foster expectations of great rewarding sensations from
acting out the callous, coercive actions that initially had symbolic character
only. Pornography in this context, provides the material for fantasies that
easily come to mind at later time and then constitute the takeoff for personal
fantasies that are similar in kind. It thus guides imagery, imagination,
fantasies, and expectations. Sequentially, exposure to external aggressive
sexual imagery increases the probability of engaging in overt coercive behavior.
Only
5% of women college students who reported forced sex during the previous year
reported the incident to the police.
Less than 10% of rapes reported in the San Francisco survey had been
reported to the police.
- Kanin (1969); Mosher
(1971); Koss & Oros (1982)
"about one-fourth of male
college students admitted to having made forcible attempts at intercourse"
-
National Crime Survey U.S.
Department of Justice
Forcible rape has increased by 562% (73,240
cases) since 1960; by 11% between 1983 and 1986.
Does Pornography
Promote Abuse?
"Levels of aggression in already-angered men are
increased by exposure to hard-core materials."
-
Federal Bureau of
Investigation
Research conducted involving 36 serial murderers
revealed that 81% (29/36) reported pornography as one of their highest sexual
interests, making pornography one of the most common profile characteristics of
serial murderers.
-
Dr. William Marshall
(1983)
He found that 86% of rapists admitted regular use of
pornography, with 57% admitting actual imitation of pornography scenes in
commission of sex crimes.
Responses found to characterize (convicted) rapists were:
1) general acceptance of rape myths, and
2) high arousal to rape depictions.
He studied male college students, asking them, "How
likely would you be to rape if you knew you would not be caught?" --35%
indicated they would.
- Malamuth and Check
(1985)
After studying 307 students, they concluded that "media
depictions (pornography) suggesting that (showing that) rape results in the
victim's arousal contributes to men's belief in a similar rape myth --
particularly men with higher inclinations to aggress against women."
- Victor Cline, Ph.D. (Utah
Psychologist)
He identified a common pattern of progression with
many pornography users (sex offenders):1. addiction to hard core pornography;
2. escalation in the need for more shocking material;
3. desensitization toward initially shocking material;
and
4. an increased tendency to "act out" sexual
activities
Findings show that massive exposure (4 hours forty minutes
over six weeks) to standard pornography (people having consensual, nonviolent
sex) resulted in
1. a loss of compassion toward women as rape victims and
toward women in general;
2. a loss of concern about the effects of pornography on
others;
3. a need for more violent and bizarre forms of sex;
4. a desensitization to violent, non-coercive hard core
pornography; and
5. a trivialization of rape.
- Michigan State Police ( Lt.
Darrell H. Pope)
Studied and recorded the use of pornography in
sex crimes. He researched 48,000 sex crimes spanning a 20 year period
(1956-1979). (Research was done in 1977, replicated in 1981).
In 42% of the 48,000 sex crimes investigated, police
indicated that pornography was involved -- used just prior to, or during the act
of sexual assault -- as stated by the victim or the offender.
A detailed content analysis of 193 cases of rape and of 178
cases of juvenile sexual abuse revealed a clear relationship between violent
pornography and sexual abuse.
- Goldstein, Kant and Harman
(1973)
Rapists are 15 times as likely as non-offenders (30% to 2%)
to have had exposure to "hard core" pornography during childhood or
between 6 to 10 years of age. They also tended to report an earlier age of
"peak experience" with pornography."
It is highly likely, based upon McGaugh's studies on
memory, that the early experiences "stood out in the minds" of these
children because of the release of the chemical epinephrine during their
emotional arousal. This makes these findings even more disturbing.
Pornography's
Relationship To Child Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
The Problem
- The National Coalition For
Children's Justice (Ken Wooden)
Between 1981 and 1985, child
sexual abuse rose by 175%. Child molestation cases in the home in 1986 were
216,216.
- National Center of Child
Abuse and Neglect, Children's Bureau, U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services: Study of National Incidence and Prevalence of Child Abuse and
Neglect (1988) (NIS-2)
There were 138,000 children abused sexually
in 1986, and another 17,000 in danger and at risk of being sexually abused.
- U.S. Department of Justice,
Network News, Fall Edition (1985)
"One in three females and
one in ten males will be sexually molested before the age of 18. Four million
child molesters reside in this country."
A
study of 411 non-incarcerated sex offenders (sexual deviants or paraphiliacs)
showed that sex offenders attempted an average of 581 sex offenses each,
completed an average of 533 offenses, and victimized 336 people each over a 12
year period. This included pedophiles (child molesters).
"The frequency of self reported crimes" (for the
non-incarcerated sex offenders they studied) "was vastly greater than the
number of crimes for which they had been arrested. The ratio of arrest to
commission of the more violent crimes such as rape and child molestation was
approximately 1:30.
- Report of the U.S. Congress
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations on Child Pornography and Pedophilia
(1986)
"No single characteristic of pedophilia is more
pervasive than the obsession with child pornography. The fascination of
pedophiles with child pornography and child abuse has been documented in many
studies and has been established by hundreds of sexually explicit materials
involving children.
"Detective William Dworin of the Los Angeles Police
Department estimates that of the 700 child molesters in whose arrest he has
participated during the last ten years, more than half had child pornography in
their possession. About 80 percent owned either child or adult pornography.
Child pornography plays a central role in child
molestations by pedophiles, serving to justify their conduct, assist them in
seducing their victims, and provide a means to blackmail the children they have
molested in order to prevent exposure.
He
studied 240 child molesters (pedophiles). They averaged 30 (homosexual or
same-sex) to 60 (heterosexual) victims before being caught. The typical child
molester will sexually abuse 380 children in a lifetime.
The Los Angeles Police Department reported that most child molesters
were themselves molested as children. They tend to seek out victims of the age
they were when first molested. One study reported that 57% of molesters studied
had been victims of child molestation themselves.
Does Pornography
Promote Abuse?
- Dr. William Marshall
(1983)
87% of girl child molesters and 77% of boy child molesters
studied admitted to regular use of hard core adult pornography. The obscene
material was used by these sex offenders for three reasons:
(1) to stimulate themselves;
(2) to destroy the consciences and lower the inhibitions
and resistance to sexual activity in their intended child victims; and
(3) as teaching tools for the child to imitate or model
in their real life sexual encounter with the adult.
- John Rabun, Exploited and
Missing Children Unit of Louisville, KY
"The Police/Social
work team of the Exploited and Missing Child Unit (EMCU) of Louisville, KY
investigated 1,400 cases of children suspected of being victims of sexual
exploitation. Over 40 major cases involved the successful prosecution of adults
involved with over 12 children each. One case involved 320 children. At the time
of the arrest of and/or service of search warrants, all 40 of these adult
predators were found with various forms of adult pornography, and in most cases
child nudes and/or child pornography were also found.
"Over four years, the EMCU team learned to expect
to always find adult pornography since it was used for:
(1) the offender's own arousal;
(2) self-validation of their own sex deviations;
(3) extortion of child victims or other adults; and
(4) deliberate and planned lowering of inhibitions of
child victims.
- The Badgley Report
(1984)
The report found that almost 60% of both male and female
juvenile prostitutes had been asked to be the subject of sexually explicit films
or photographs; 12% of the girls and 20% of the boys had actually been used in
making pornography; juvenile prostitutes are a high-risk group in regard to
being exploited by pornographers.
Two smaller American studies (Burgess: 755 of youth
hustlers had participated in pornography; John Rabun: 37% had participated)
emphatically confirm this finding.
A detailed content analysis of 193 cases of rape and of 178
cases of juvenile sexual abuse revealed a clear relationship between violent
pornography and sexual abuse.
- Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorder 111-R
Pedophiles who act on their urges
with children commonly develop excuses or rationalizations about their illegal
sexual activities toward the children:
1) that they have "educational value" for the
child
2) that the child derives "sexual pleasure"
from them
3) that the child was "sexually provocative"
toward them -- led them on.
These three rationalizations are "themes that are
also common in pedophillic pornography." p.284. In other words, pornography
teaches three myths that pedophiles believe, and act on, when they molest
children.
- Southern California Child
Exploitation Task Force (1988)
"One of the men we prosecuted had 50,000
photographs of noncommercial child pornography in a storage locker. He admitted
molesting several hundred children following his release from a state hospital
for a child molestation conviction. He even maintained a ledger listing those
molestations. He taught swimming and tennis to youngsters, some of whom became
his victims."
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