Unhealthy sexual relationships linked to gender stereotypes
Washington: Female college students who believe women are subservient and who endorse music media's degradation of women are more likely to be involved in an unhealthy sexual relationship, according to a recent study.
The study from WSU's Murrow Center for Media & Health Promotion Research found that college women who believe in traditional gender stereotypes were significantly less likely to ask for and adhere to their partner's consent to sexual activity and were less likely to refuse unwanted sexual advances. Researcher Stacey J.T. Hust and her colleagues also found that acceptance of music media's degradation of women was associated with unhealthy sexual consent negotiation.
"Our findings suggest college women's acceptance of degrading media portrayals of women, like those we see in current popular music videos such as DJ Khaled's "I'm the One" or Katy Perry's "Bon Appetit," plays a role in their real-life sexual relationships," Hust said. "Holding stereotypical beliefs about sexuality and endorsing music that degrades women may be a reflection of a broader attitude that men hold power over women," suggested second author Kathleen Boyce Rodgers.
College should be an ideal time to encourage students' participation in sexual assault prevention programs due to the prevalence of sexual experimentation and the subsequent risk for sexual assault victimization and perpetration during this time.
"Our study suggests that programs that utilize media to empower women to reject traditional sexual scripts could create awareness and stimulate conversation about consent, sexual expectations and stereotypes," Rodgers said. The study appears in the journal Family Relations.