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Rape

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  • Amnesty Says Sudan Militias Use Rape as Weapon (July 19, 2004)
    ...has accused pro-government militias in the Darfur region of Sudan of using rape and other forms of sexual violence "as a weapon of war" to humiliate black...
  • Rape in Darfur (October 27, 2004)
    ...ng from teenagers to married women in their thirties — were also raped. Rape in Darfur is a weapon of war, one that is illegal, illegitimate and ye...
  • Afghans Now Fear Reprisals, Havoc (November 15, 2001)
    ......
  • Briton Says CIA Threatened Torture (October 4, 2003)
    ... has told the Guardian that US agents threatened him with beatings and rape in an attempt to break him. Wahab al-Rawi, 38, was denied a lawyer, he...
  • Military Courts Get New Powers (April 14, 2002)
    ...in prison either with or without parole for serious crimes such as murder, rape and kidnapping. Previously, the courts could sentence those criminals to a...
  • Torture as Pornography (May 7, 2004)
    ...or the personnel. Factors facilitating other forms of atrocity facilitated rape. Uniforms provided anonymity. Potential victims were dehumanised; perpetra...
  • UN Urges Global Action on Darfur (April 4, 2004)
    ...nds of people had been killed in the region and there were reports of mass rape by the Arab militias. He said it appeared to be an organised campaign o...
  • Female GIs Report Rapes in Iraq War (January 25, 2004)
    ...rs have sought sexual-trauma counseling and other assistance from civilian rape crisis organizations after returning from war duty in Iraq, Kuwait and oth...
  • How Teddy Roosevelt Fathered the “Bush Doctrine” (December 10, 2004)
    ...accused of seduction” and had “proved conclusively” that he was “guilty of rape.” In his Annual Message to the Congress on December 6, 1904, Roosevelt...
  • Sexual Domination in Uniform: An American Value (May 18, 2004)
    ...ty. The horrific Denver Post revelations of the sexual assault and rape of multitudes of servicewomen are a further indication that sexual dominat...
  • Rapes Reported by Servicewomen in the Persian Gulf and Elsewhere (February 26, 2004)
    ...r Force Base, a large training facility in Texas, have reported to a local rape-crisis center that they were assaulted in 2002. The Air Force Academy in C...
  • Green Minister's Resignation Shocks Belgium (August 27, 2002)
    ...utionary principle to block field trials of a genetically modified oilseed rape and a transgenic apple tree trial. Three other applications were approved...
  • Pashtuns Prey to Vengeance After Taliban's Fall in North (March 7, 2002)
    ...e fleeing their villages by the thousands now, telling tales of murder and rape and robbery, and leaving behind empty towns and grazing grounds just begin...
  • Liberia's Taylor Accepts Nigerian Asylum Offer (July 7, 2003)
    ... of fighters fired up by drink and drugs and with few qualms about murder, rape or looting in a country that was once well off by West African standards. ...
  • U.S. Moves to Block Human-Rights Lawsuit Against Against Exxon Mobil (August 6, 2002)
    ...Aceh who contend that they were victims of murder, torture, kidnapping and rape by the military unit guarding Exxon Mobil's gas field. Exxon Mobil has den...
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    Rape

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

    For the domesticated crop plant called "rape", see rapeseed.

    For responding to rape as a medical emergency, see sexual assault.

    A rape was also a minor administrative division of Sussex equivalent to a hundred elsewhere in England.

    Rape is a serious sexual assault that is regarded by many as one of the most serious crimes. The technical definition of rape includes any serious and destructive assault against a person or people, but in contemporary English the term is overwhelmingly associated with sexual assault.

    Table of contents

    Definition

    In criminal law, the term refers to a sexual assault in which an offender forces an unconsenting victim to engage in sexual acts, primarily sexual intercourse. Some jurisdictions use terms such as "sexual assault" or "sexual battery". Some define rape as sexual assault with penetration. Rape can also refer to sexual acts with a consenting person that the law defines as too young to legally consent; this is statutory rape. Colloquially, the term "date rape" or "acquaintance rape" refers to rape that occurs between individuals who are dating or are acquaintances. Date rape drugs like flunitrazepam or GHB are sometimes used. The Uniform Crime Reports use "forcible rape" to refer only to rapes against females, by males. Laws defining rape and associated issues, such as the "age of consent", vary greatly between different jurisdictions.

    Punishment

    Rape is considered a loathsome crime in most cultures, and is sometimes severely punished by the law. Castration has been used as a punishment for habitual offenders in some countries. There is a small number of countries where rape has and still is considered to be tolerable or even honorable and encouraged. Also in some cultures, a female victim of rape can be punished as a criminal sex offender, even when it is acknowledged that sexual intercourse was forced on her. Social attitudes toward rape and appropriate punishment are a subject of serious ongoing debate in some Western cultures.

    According to RAINN statistics, only about 6% of rapists—roughly 1 out of 16—will ever be convicted and spend time in jail.

    Effects

    As a form of violent assault, rape can be very serious, and many sexual assaults end with the death of the victim. Rape can also result in serious physical injury, as well as in pregnancy, and the contraction of sexually transmitted diseases. The most common effects of rape on victims are psychological. In the past, survivors of rape and sexual assault were often diagnosed with Rape Trauma Syndrome (RTS), then considered an psychological disorder. RTS is no longer considered a diagnosis, but rather a set of normal psychological and physiological reactions that a survivor is likely to experience. These include, but are not limited to, feelings of guilt and shame, tension, anger, eating disturbances, and sometimes depression. The reactions are very similar to those that would be experienced by a survivor of any other traumatizing experience. The psychological trauma is cited as one of the reasons that rape is usually not reported to the authorities.

    In Western countries, forcible rape is considered a medical emergency. Medical and law enforcement professionals strongly recommend that a victim call for help to report this criminal act and medical emergency. Physical injuries such as gynecologic hemorrhage may have resulted. Additionally, emergency contraception and preventative treatment against sexually transmitted diseases may be required. Emergency medical technicians and doctors are trained in how to help rape victims. It may also possible to collect evidence such as DNA samples which can help in criminal prosecution of the assailant.

    Because of the sexual nature of rape crimes, victims often suffer serious psychological trauma. This is especially true in societies with strong sexual customs and taboos. For example, a woman (and especially a virgin) who is raped may be deemed "damaged" by society: She may suffer isolation, may be prohibited to marry, or may even be divorced if she was married. She may also feel "dirty" or as if the crime was her fault.

    The process to denounce and eventually convict an offender is often hindered by similar psychological effects. Victims frequently feel shame when describing what has happened (especially if a female victim must report the incident to a male law officer). Also, the intimate questions and medical examinations required for prosecution can make the victim uncomfortable. In societies that do not acknowledge women as full citizens, this process is even more difficult for female victims.

    Underreporting

    In 2001, only 39% of rapes and sexual assaults in the United States were reported to law enforcement officials—about one in every three, according to the 1999 National Crime Victimization Survey. The most common reasons given by victims for not reporting rapes are the belief that it is a private or personal matter and that they fear reprisal from the assailant.

    Rape-related advocacy groups have suggested several tactics to increase reporting of sexual assaults, most aimed at lessening the psychological trauma often suffered by rape victims following their assault. Many police departments now assign female police officers to deal with rape cases. Advocacy groups also argue for preservation of the victim's privacy during the legal process; it is standard practice among mainstream American news media outlets to not divulge the names of alleged rape victims in news reports.

    Some groups also operate hotlines to offer advice and psychological first aid. In the US, one of the most prominent hotlines for rape victims is operated by the organizaton RAINN, or The Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network. RAINN is the only completely toll-free, completely-confidential 24-hour hotline in America. Their phone number is 1-800-656-HOPE.

    Custodial (Prison) Rape

    Research carried out by Cindy Struckman-Johnson and David Struckman-Johnson of the University of South Dakota has found that 22%-25% of male prisoners in the United States have been the victim of sexual assault, 10% have been the victim of rape, and 6% have been the victim of gang rape. Women prisoners are especially vulnerable to assault by guards and other staff members, and the incidence in the United States has been denounced by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

    Male-on-male rape in western cultures is believed to occur primarily in coercive institutional settings, chiefly prisons and detention facilities. Rates in non-western cultures are not available.

    Prisoner Rape: Law, Policy and Science

    Rape and Sexual Torture

    In countries where torture is tolerated or accepted as part of the normal behaviour of police or security, rape of both female and male detainees is a common occurrence. It is used often as a means to 'soften' detainees for interrogation or to intimidate them into compliance. In societies with strong social taboos on sexuality sexual torture is commonly used to destroy the credibility and influence of politically dissident individuals.

    Rape under such circumstances often has even more profoundly negative psychological effects than under circumstances which sexual assaults usually happpen.

    Statutory Rape

    Statutory rape is the crime of sexual intercourse with someone under the age of consent. This term is primarily used in the United States. It is so named because it is considered to be rape under a specific statute rather than under the principles of criminal common law because the consent of the minor is irrelevant as the state has an interest in protecting minor children. Some states make exceptions to statutory rape laws when the perpetrator is also young, or if he marries the minor before being convicted of the crime.

    Acquaintance rape

    There is no legal distinction between rape by a stranger and rape which takes place between acquaintances, friends or lovers. There is more difficulty in securing conviction against a known assailant, but once established the crime is treated the same way.

    Socially, the issue of acquaintance rape (also known as "date rape") is very contentious. Evidence suggests that a rape victim is far more likely to know their assailant than not. [1]

    There is considerable debate as to what constitutes proper and complete consent in a sexual relationship. How explicit consent should be, how frequently it needs to be established, and what constitutes diminished capacity (usually due to drugs or alcohol) are all subjects of some disagreement. These debates take place both on moral and ethical grounds, and as a legal issue, since rape can only be convicted as a crime with intent, and the erroneous belief of consent is a common defense.

    "Rape" among animal species

    Some animals appear to show behavior which resembles rape in humans, in particular combining sexual intercourse with violent assault, such as observed in ducks and geese.

    It is difficult to determine to what extent the idea of rape can be extended to intercourse in other animal species, as the defining attribute of rape in humans is the lack of informed consent, which is difficult to determine in other animals.

    However, it is clear that sometimes an animal is sexually approached by another animal and penetrated while it is clear that it does not want it, e.g. it tries to run away. This has led to some people describing forcible penetration in animals as "natural" behavior, with the connotation that rape in humans is also in some way "natural". This is the subject of considerable controversy.

    References

    • Gowaty, P.A. and N. Buschhaus. 1997. Functions of aggressive and forced copulations in birds: female resistance and the CODE hypothesis. American Zoologist (in press).

    External links


This description is from Wikipedia. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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