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Sex, Culture, and the
Biology of Rape: Toward Explanation and
Prevention
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Owen D.
Jones
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| For all that has been written about rape, its
multiple causes remain insufficiently understood
for law to deter it effectively. This follows,
Professor Jones argues, from inadequately
interdisciplinary study of rape causation.
Specifically, integrating life science and social
science perspectives on sexual aggression can
improve law's model of rape behavior, and further
our efforts to reduce its incidence. This Article
first explains biobehavioral theories of sexual
aggression, and offers a guide to common but
avoidable errors in assessing them. It then
compares a number of those theories' predictions
with existing data and demonstrates how knowledge
of the effects of evolutionary processes on human
behavioral predispositions may help us better
understand--without justifying or excusing--psychological
mechanisms that contribute to patterns of rape.
Because increased knowledge of causal influences
may afford law increased effectiveness in
deterring rape, the author then explores ways in
which biobehavioral theories could affect
analysis of several current legal issues, from
the debate over chemical castration to the
meaning of motive in rape-relevant legislation. |
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Copyright © 1999 by California Law Review, Inc. California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California nonprofit corporation. CLR and the authors are solely responsible for the content of their publications.
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