不可避免还是可以预防?战时强奸的生物社会理论

IF 1.4 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Evolutionary Psychological Science Pub Date : 2024-03-08 DOI:10.1007/s40806-024-00387-2
Gavin S. Vance, Virgil Zeigler-Hill, Jennifer Vonk, Todd K. Shackelford
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引用次数: 0

摘要

性暴力可能是整个人类历史上战争的一个特征,甚至可能在史前冲突中就已存在。近几十年来,国际决策者加大了禁止和起诉战时性暴力的力度,包括对战时强奸犯罪嫌疑人进行刑事审判。社会科学家对战时强奸提出了一系列可能的解释,并试图将有关战时强奸的数据纳入一个单一、统一的理论。许多此类理论认为父权价值观、对妇女的敌视态度或对特定种族群体的仇恨等社会文化因素是导致战时强奸的潜在原因。我们引用进化心理学、生物学和人类学的证据,回顾了相互竞争的战时强奸社会文化理论。我们强调了生物社会理论的优势,该理论考虑了社会和生物因素对战时强奸的影响,并具有很强的理论-数据契合度。具体而言,我们强调生物社会理论不仅能够解释战时强奸这一几乎普遍存在的现象,而且能够解释不同武装冲突中战时强奸发生率的差异。
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Inevitable or Preventable? The Biosocial Theory of Wartime Rape

Sexual violence has likely been a feature of warfare throughout human history and may even have been present during prehistoric conflicts. In recent decades, international policymakers have improved efforts to prohibit and prosecute wartime sexual violence, including holding criminal tribunals for suspected perpetrators of wartime rape. Social scientists have offered a range of potential explanations for wartime rape and have attempted to bring the data on wartime rape under a single, unified theory. Many such theories have identified sociocultural factors such as patriarchal values, hostile attitudes toward women, or hatred toward specific ethnic groups as potential causes of wartime rape. We review the competing sociocultural theories of wartime rape citing evidence from evolutionary psychology, biology, and anthropology. We highlight strengths of the biosocial theory, which consider the influence of both social and biological factors on wartime rape, and enjoy strong theory-data fit. Specifically, we emphasize the ability of the biosocial theory to not only explain the existence of wartime rape as a near-universal phenomenon, but also its ability to explain variation in rates of wartime rape across armed conflicts.

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来源期刊
Evolutionary Psychological Science
Evolutionary Psychological Science Psychology-Social Psychology
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
13.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Psychological Science is an international, interdisciplinary journal that publishes empirical research, theoretical contributions, literature reviews, and commentaries addressing human evolved psychology and behavior. The Journal especially welcomes submissions on non-humans that inform human psychology and behavior, as well as submissions that address clinical implications and applications of an evolutionary perspective. The Journal is informed by all the social and life sciences, including anthropology, biology, criminology, law, medicine, philosophy, political science, and the humanities, and welcomes contributions from these and related fields that contribute to the understanding of human evolved psychology and behavior. Submissions should not exceed 10,000 words, all inclusive.
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