This poster was produced in 2006 and serves as one of many examples of institutionalized forms of ‘victim blaming’.
I was slightly horrified to see this poster re-circulating on social media this morning. It is yet another example of ‘victim blaming’ – the suggestion that a victim of rape was somehow at fault because of her behaviour.
This poster becomes that bit more shocking when you spot that it is produced, published and distributed by our own government.
‘Victim blaming’ is one of those myths that I spend so much of my time trying to counter. Simply, a rape is never the victims fault – the blame always ultimately rests with those who put their penis inside someone without that other persons consent.
Simple.
Or, in the words of the NHS (in a separate campaign to the ‘Know your limits’ campaign):
“If you have been sexually assaulted, remember that it wasn’t your fault. It doesn’t matter what you were wearing, where you were or whether you had been drinking. A sexual assault is always the fault of the perpetrator.”
If the NHS did want to draw some connections between alcohol consumption and sexual assault though without slipping down this dangerous road of victim blaming, they could have made the exact same poster with the words:
“approximately one-half of all sexual assaults are committed by men who have been drinking alcohol.”
One study on alcohol and sexual assault concluded it’s literature review saying:
“Depending on the sample studied and the measures used, the estimates for alcohol use among perpetrators have ranged from 34 to 74 percent”.
The same study estimates that at least 20 percent of American men report having perpetrated sexual assault and 5 percent report having committed rape. The obvious conclusion to this is that 10% of American men have committed sexual assault after they have been drinking.
This issue is a serious one that involves facing up to taboos as well as a very well funded drinks industry. Our safety, not just of girls, but all of us depends on tackling this. I don’t think it is hyperbole to say we are in midst of an unspoken epidemic.
Sadly this contribution from the NHS to the debate adds little but does reinforce an incredibly negative persistent perception that the victim is somehow to blame for being raped.
Remove the question mark BBC Radio Bristol, a rape victim is never to blame
A series of posters have been put up all over Bristol highlighting some of the lingering myths around blaming the victims of rape. The campaigns message is simple: There are no excuses for rape and the victim is never to blame: Whatever they were wearing; However much they’ve had to drink; Even if they’ve said yes to other sexual activities.
It remains a depressing reality that such an advertising campaign is needed in the first place. Sadly though, they really are.
The campaign group behind the posters says that 3894 women and girls in Bristol aged 16-59 are victims of sexual assault in a year. This statistic becomes even more shocking in the context of there only being about 140,000 women of that age living in Bristol.
The campaign primarily focuses though on removing any lingering doubts that a victim is, in any way, to blame if he/she is raped. It is not a question – a victim is not to blame for being raped.
This is a point that BBC Radio Bristol failed to pick up on when they tweeted about these new posters asking the question:
Well, Radio Bristol (and local radio’s obsessive compulsion to make everything into an interactive question)…no, a victim of rape is never to blame for being attacked. By even asking the question I think you have missed the key slogan of this campaign: There are no excuses for rape and the victim is never to blame.
Remove the question mark BBC Radio Bristol. A rape victim is never to blame.
Follow the conversation on twitter #noexcusebristol
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Tagged as a rape victim is never to blame. Rape, BBC, Bristol, Remove the question mark BBC Radio Bristol, sexual violence, victim blaming