How to Obtain
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NCJ Number:
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NCJ 234466
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Title:
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Adolescent Sexual Assault Victims' Experiences with SANE-SARTs and the Criminal Justice System
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Author(s):
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Rebecca Campbell Ph.D. ; Megan Greeson M.A. ; Deborah I. Bybee Ph.D. ; Angie Kennedy Ph.D. ; Debra Patterson Ph.D.
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Date Published:
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05/2011 |
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Page Count:
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164 |
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Sponsoring Agency:
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Grant Number:
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2007-WG-BX-0012 |
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Sale Source:
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NCJRS Photocopy Services Box 6000 Rockville, MD 20849-6000 United States |
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Document:
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PDF |
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Agency Summary:
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Agency Summary |
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Type:
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Research Paper |
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Language:
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English |
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Country:
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United States |
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Annotation:
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The purpose of this project was to examine adolescent sexual assault survivors’ help-seeking experiences with the legal and medical systems in two Midwestern communities that have different models of Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE) / Sexual Assault Response Team (SART) interventions. |
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Abstract:
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This project had two main objectives. First, qualitative interviews with adolescent sexual assault victims were conducted regarding their initial post-assault disclosures and their pathways to seeking help from the medical and legal systems. It is important to understand how and why teen survivors decide to seek help from these programs in the first place. Although SANE-SART interventions have the potential to be useful resources to teen victims, they are only useful insofar as they are utilized by survivors. The second objective was to conduct a quantitative analysis to determine what factors predict successful prosecution of adolescent sexual assault cases. Once teen victims are “in the system” what factors determine whether a case will be prosecuted? Criminal justice prosecution is a multi-step process, from reporting to referral, arrest, prosecution (which itself has many steps), and final case outcome. Rather than focusing at any one stage, we assessed progress through this system as an ordinal variable in order to capture incremental change. We examined how differences between the two SANE-SART models—and the evolution of these models over time—predicted prosecution outcomes relative to the predictive utility of victim characteristics, assault characteristics, and medical forensic evidence findings. |
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Main Term(s):
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Rape ; Sexual assault |
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Index Term(s):
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Counseling ; Sexual assault victims ; Rape counseling ; Rape research ; Victim counseling ; NIJ final report |
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To cite this abstract, use the following link:
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=256423
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not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.
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