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Interpreting Survey Questions About Sexual Aggression in Cross-Cultural Research: A Qualitative Study with Young Adults from Nine European Countries
Authors:Barbara Krahé  Stans de Haas  Ine Vanwesenbeeck  Gabriel Bianchi  Joannes Chliaoutakis  Antonio Fuertes  Margarida Gaspar de Matos  Eleni Hadjigeorgiou  Sabine Hellemans  Christiana Kouta  Dwayne Meijnckens  Liubove Murauskiene  Maria Papadakaki  Lucia Ramiro  Marta Reis  Katrien Symons  Paulina Tomaszewska  Isabel Vicario-Molina  Andrzej Zygadlo
Affiliation:1.Department of Psychology,University of Potsdam,Potsdam,Germany;2.Rutgers,Utrecht,The Netherlands;3.Utrecht University,Utrecht,The Netherlands;4.Slovak Academy of Sciences,Bratislava,Slovakia;5.Technological Educational Institute of Crete,Heraklion,Greece;6.University of Salamanca,Salamanca,Spain;7.University of Lisbon,Lisbon,Portugal;8.Cyprus University of Technology,Limassol,Cyprus;9.Ghent University,Ghent,Belgium;10.Public Foundation “MTVC” and Vilnius University,Vilnius,Lithuania;11.University of Zielona Góra,Zielona Góra,Poland
Abstract:Examining equivalence in the interpretation of survey items on sexual assault by participants from different cultures is an important step toward building a valid international knowledge base about the prevalence of sexual aggression among young adults. Referring to the theoretical framework of contextualism, this study presents qualitative data from semi-structured interviews with 128 young adults from nine EU countries on their understanding of survey items from the Sexual Aggression and Victimization Scale (SAV-S). The measure had previously been used to collect quantitative data on the prevalence of sexual aggression perpetration and victimization in the same countries that had yielded substantial differences in the rates of victimization and perpetration between countries. Based on the methodological approach of a mixed research design, the current study was conducted as a follow-up to the quantitative study with a new sample to explore whether systematic differences in the interpretation of the survey items in the different countries might explain part of the variation in prevalence rates. The interviews showed that participants from the nine countries interpreted the items of the SAV-S in a similar way and as intended by the authors of the scale. Systematic differences between men and women in interpreting the survey items were revealed. Implications of the findings for conducting survey research on sexual aggression across cultures are discussed.
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