Condemnation of Statutory Rape Based on Respondent Race, Perpetrator Race, and Victim Race
ORCID
Haynes: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1408-9291
MSU Affiliation
College of Arts and Sciences; Department of Sociology
Creation Date
2026-06-01
Abstract
Race impacts perceptions of crimes, perpetrators, and victims. Although statutory rape generally receives little empirical or media attention, it has important implications for victims and offenders across the United States and appears to be enforced in a haphazard way. This study used a between-subjects experimental survey design at two universities (n = 1,370) to assess the impact of respondent race, perpetrator race, and victim race on attitudes toward statutory rape. Results of a repeated measures analysis of variance indicated that respondents viewed both White victims and their perpetrators as bad, blameworthy, deserving of punishment, harmed, and likely to commit crime in the future, judgments suggesting that the respondents take this sexual activity seriously. In contrast, analyses revealed that respondents were significantly less concerned about Black victims than White victims. Consistent with the liberation hypothesis, these differences in attitudes may contribute to the law being enforced inconsistently, providing differential access to justice based on a variable that is not legally relevant.
Publication Date
7-1-2019
Publication Title
Violence and Victims
Publisher
Springer
First Page
414
Last Page
433
Recommended Citation
Koon-Magnin, S., Haynes, S. H., & Ruback, R. B. (2019). Condemnation of Statutory Rape Based on Respondent Race, Perpetrator Race, and Victim Race. Violence and Victims, 34(3), 414–433. https://doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.VV-D-16-00217