Trigger Warning: This post deals with issues of domestic violence and may be triggering for survivors of abuse.
One in five Australians.
Glance around you when you’re leaning against the car, waiting for the school pick-up. Look at your colleagues in the afternoon meeting, when everyone’s minds have begun to wander. Gaze into the eyes of fellow shoppers at the supermarket, rushing to get those last minute dinner ingredients.
Look at the people you spend every day of your life with and count them: One, two, three, four… five.
On average, one in every five of those people you see believes that if a woman is intoxicated when she is raped, then she is – at least partly – to blame. That if a man forces himself upon her, insists on sexual intercourse despite her disinclination or protests, she is as fault for being the victim of sexual assault.
Count to six and the statistics gets even more scary. Because one in six Australians also supports the shameful notion that when a woman says ‘no’ to sex, she’s just being playful, teasing, coquettish – and that really she mans ‘yes’.
New nationwide research released by Victorian Health, reveal that Australians’ attitudes to domestic violence and sexual assault are woefully behind the times. While only a very low number of those surveyed say that violence against women is justified, they displayed a lack of understanding about what violence really is and used illegitimate gendered stereotypes to excuse or justify men’s behaviour.