A Comparison of Sexual Aggression Risk Factors Between the United States and the Philippines |
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Authors: | Antover P. Tuliao Bernice Vania N. Landoy Alicia K. Klanecky Dennis E. McChargue |
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Affiliation: | 1. Community, Family, and Addiction Sciences Department, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, USAantover.tuliao@ttu.eduhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6906-8586;3. Division of Social Sciences, University of the Philippines-Visayas, Miagao, Iloilo, Philippines;4. Department of Psychological Science, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska, USA;5. Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA |
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Abstract: | Sexual violence against women is a global problem, prompting the need to investigate the risk factors among males in non-Western, non-industrialized countries. Using the expanded Confluence Model, this study examined and compared risk factors of sexual aggression between male college students in the Philippines and the United States. Using path analysis and multiple group analysis, results indicated that the expanded Confluence Model was generally invariant between countries. Direct paths from hostile attitudes toward women and impersonal sex to sexual aggression were non-significant, but indirect effects from hostile attitudes toward women, alcohol consumption, and impersonal sex to sexual aggression via the frequency of misperceiving a woman’s sexual intent were observed. Additional risk analysis indicated that the number of elevated risk factors were associated with higher self-reports of sexual aggression. |
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Keywords: | College students Confluence Model of Sexual Aggression Philippines risk factors sexual aggression |
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