Recognition of past experience predictions of current experience and sexual enforcement Sexual assault among college students has become a hot topic for the last three decades. One reason the analysis is repeated is that sexual violence is still a common and lasting experience among university students. In the early studies of the subjects, it was found that 54% of the women at the university reported that they experienced some sexual injury (Koss, Gidycz, and Wisniewski, 1987). In the same year, Muehlenhard and Linton reported that 78% of female college students experienced sexual enforcement and 15% experienced rape.
According to the survey, up to 36% of girls and 29% of boys experienced sexual abuse, 46% of girls and 20% of boys % Experienced sexual coercion. (57th UN Human Rights Committee) Recognition of sexual violence in families is increasing. An overview of research in 21 countries has revealed that 7 to 36% of women and 3 to 29% of men reported sexual damage in their childhood. Most abuse occurs in family circles. Similarly, multinational studies conducted by the World Health Organization (including developed and developing countries) suffered from 1% to 21% of women by 15 years of age (abused neglected children, 2005) Abuse reported, in most cases, male family other than father or stepfather (WHO, 2005)
Child sexual abuse is the exploitation or enforcement of children. Child sexual abuse includes various behaviors such as speech, non-physical abuse, and mandatory abuse. It may involve a single encounter with exposed persons, occasional accidental hobbies, accidental relatives, abuses by relatives or families during years, and rape and exploitation by prostitution and pornography. Child sexual abusers may be people we know and may even be of concern. Most child abusers are fathers, parents, grandparents, and other families. Senior children and colleagues also abuse children. Violators may be neighbors, nanny, pastors, teachers, coaches, or others who have intimate relationships with our children. In all cases, up to 80% of people include criminals known or trusted to children. About half of cases, trustworthy adults are fathers or stepfathers.
CAPTA embraces sexual abuse as "to engage in other pornography or aid, or to emulate employment, use, persuasion, temptation, temptation or compulsion to visualize such acts visually Child, or rape and security guards "or family relations, legal rape, harassment, prostitution, other forms of sexual exploitation, or incest incest" emotional abuse (or psychological abuse) Emotional development or a pattern of behavior that impairs self-esteem, including constant criticism, intimidation or rejection, and hiding love, support or guidance There is no evidence of child's injury or spiritual injury If, child protection services may not be able to intervene.