1. Is this scenario realistic?
2. What is “playing the game”?
3. What stereotypes are portrayed?
4. What part does alcohol play in this situation?
5. Who is responsible for this situation?
6. Do you think he should go to prison?
7. How might you feel if she was your sister or girlfriend?
8. Is kissing on the dance floor permission for sex?
9. How do we educate males and females to communicate better?
. . . to be more responsible?
“Poor judgment is NOT a rape-able offense”
Connie Peterson, F-M Rape & Abuse Crisis Center
RESOURCES
If you or a friend have been sexually assaulted or raped, here are
some resources for help and support:
BACKGROUND INFO
What is a date or acquaintance rape?
Although our discussion is about more than rape, it is useful to be
able to explain an understandable definition of acquaintance rape.
Individual state laws will differ slightly, but generally, date rape is
an act of sexual intercourse with a person (usually a woman) committed
against her will or consent . . . in this case it is committed by an acquaintance
or date. The rape would include some type of penile penetration,
either vaginal, oral, or anal. Even if the penetration is slight,
and even if the man does not ejaculate, the crime is still rape.
Although many date rapes might include physical force, force is not necessary
to meet the legal definition of rape. The threat of violence, threat
of retribution, coercion, the victim being impaired or unconscious through
the use of alcohol or drugs, would all meet the definition of rape.
The important issue here is that many students erroneously believe that
if little or no physical violence occurs, if they have had sex with the
same person before, if they have been making out and come close to intercourse
before, or if the victim is drunk or unconscious then rape has not occurred
. . . they are wrong!
Facts about rape
Most college students will have personal examples of miscommunication
in a social setting, but what statistical evidence do we have of issues
related to sexual aggression? Here are a few collected from a national
study of college students: