Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming

Purpose: The disclosure of private images with the intent of causing distress is often described as ‘revenge pornography’. In the UK, this newly legislated crime has received a high level of media attention following several high profile cases, however there is a paucity of research in this area. M...

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Main Authors: Bothamley, Sarah, Tully, Ruth
Format: Article
Published: Emerald 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40525/
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author Bothamley, Sarah
Tully, Ruth
author_facet Bothamley, Sarah
Tully, Ruth
author_sort Bothamley, Sarah
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: The disclosure of private images with the intent of causing distress is often described as ‘revenge pornography’. In the UK, this newly legislated crime has received a high level of media attention following several high profile cases, however there is a paucity of research in this area. Methods: 168 adults (UK general public) completed an online survey using a vignette approach. Views of the influence of perpetrator-victim relationship length and reason for termination were considered alongside perception of an offence, the necessity of police intervention, what extent revenge pornography creates psychological harm in victims, and victim blaming. Findings: Perpetrator-victim relationship length and reason for relationship breakdown did not influence perceptions of victim blame. Participants believed that the situation described in the vignettes was likely to be an offence, and that police intervention is somewhat necessary. Participants believed that the scenario was ‘very likely’ to create fear, and ‘moderately likely’ to create psychological/mental harm in victims. In line with the literature relating to stalking and sexual assault, men blamed the victim significantly more than women. Furthermore, women rated police intervention significantly more necessary than men. Implications: The public are recognising that revenge pornography is an offence, with consequences being fear and psychological harm, showing an awareness of the impact on victims. However, there are sex differences in the perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blame and this could be addressed by raising awareness of this crime. This research, which highlights that the public are aware of some of the harm caused, may encourage victims in coming forward to report such a crime. Originality: There is a paucity of research into revenge pornography, and this study is one of the first in this area.
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spelling nottingham-405252020-05-04T19:11:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40525/ Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming Bothamley, Sarah Tully, Ruth Purpose: The disclosure of private images with the intent of causing distress is often described as ‘revenge pornography’. In the UK, this newly legislated crime has received a high level of media attention following several high profile cases, however there is a paucity of research in this area. Methods: 168 adults (UK general public) completed an online survey using a vignette approach. Views of the influence of perpetrator-victim relationship length and reason for termination were considered alongside perception of an offence, the necessity of police intervention, what extent revenge pornography creates psychological harm in victims, and victim blaming. Findings: Perpetrator-victim relationship length and reason for relationship breakdown did not influence perceptions of victim blame. Participants believed that the situation described in the vignettes was likely to be an offence, and that police intervention is somewhat necessary. Participants believed that the scenario was ‘very likely’ to create fear, and ‘moderately likely’ to create psychological/mental harm in victims. In line with the literature relating to stalking and sexual assault, men blamed the victim significantly more than women. Furthermore, women rated police intervention significantly more necessary than men. Implications: The public are recognising that revenge pornography is an offence, with consequences being fear and psychological harm, showing an awareness of the impact on victims. However, there are sex differences in the perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blame and this could be addressed by raising awareness of this crime. This research, which highlights that the public are aware of some of the harm caused, may encourage victims in coming forward to report such a crime. Originality: There is a paucity of research into revenge pornography, and this study is one of the first in this area. Emerald 2017-10-06 Article PeerReviewed Bothamley, Sarah and Tully, Ruth (2017) Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming. Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research . ISSN 2042-8715 Revenge Pornography Victim Blame Victimisation Sexual Violence Partner Violence Domestic Abuse http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/abs/10.1108/JACPR-09-2016-0253 doi:10.1108/JACPR-09-2016-0253 doi:10.1108/JACPR-09-2016-0253
spellingShingle Revenge Pornography
Victim Blame
Victimisation
Sexual Violence
Partner Violence
Domestic Abuse
Bothamley, Sarah
Tully, Ruth
Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title_full Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title_fullStr Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title_full_unstemmed Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title_short Understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
title_sort understanding revenge pornography: public perceptions of revenge pornography and victim blaming
topic Revenge Pornography
Victim Blame
Victimisation
Sexual Violence
Partner Violence
Domestic Abuse
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40525/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40525/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40525/