TY - JOUR
T1 - Gender Microaggressions as a Gateway to Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault
T2 - Expanding the Conceptualization of Youth Sexual Violence
AU - Gartner, Rachel
AU - Sterzing, Paul R.
PY - 2016/11
Y1 - 2016/11
N2 - A problem with the current conceptualization of youth sexual violence is its exclusion of chronic, “low-severity” forms of violence known as gender microaggressions. A review of the sexual assault, sexual harassment, and gender microaggression literatures is undertaken to identify the unique and overlapping characteristics of each construct. A theoretically grounded conceptualization of youth sexual violence is presented with gender microaggressions, sexual harassment, and sexual assault existing along a continuum from chronic, low-severity to infrequent, “high-severity” offenses. In this reconceptualization, gender microaggressions exist as a unique form of youth sexual violence and function as a potential “gateway mechanism” to legally actionable offenses.
AB - A problem with the current conceptualization of youth sexual violence is its exclusion of chronic, “low-severity” forms of violence known as gender microaggressions. A review of the sexual assault, sexual harassment, and gender microaggression literatures is undertaken to identify the unique and overlapping characteristics of each construct. A theoretically grounded conceptualization of youth sexual violence is presented with gender microaggressions, sexual harassment, and sexual assault existing along a continuum from chronic, low-severity to infrequent, “high-severity” offenses. In this reconceptualization, gender microaggressions exist as a unique form of youth sexual violence and function as a potential “gateway mechanism” to legally actionable offenses.
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886109916654732
U2 - 10.1177/0886109916654732
DO - 10.1177/0886109916654732
M3 - Article
SN - 0886-1099
VL - 31
SP - 491
EP - 503
JO - Affilia - Feminist Inquiry in Social Work
JF - Affilia - Feminist Inquiry in Social Work
IS - 4
ER -