A new study — narrowly focused on one campus and one slice of women, but still illuminating in its findings — shows that rape and attempted rape are incredibly common. Over the course of one group’s freshman year, nearly 20% of them, or just less than one in five, experienced an attempted or completed rape.
In 2010, researchers surveyed first-year students at an unnamed upstate New York college and eventually drew data from 483 respondents, keeping in touch with them throughout their freshman year. They defined rape as “vaginal, oral, or anal penetration using threats of violence or use of physical force, or using the tactic of victim incapacitation.” Throughout that year, 9% of the women reported an attempted or completed rape using threats of violence or force, and 15.4% said someone had tried to rape them or raped them while they were incapacitated. The total number is 18.6%, because some women experienced more than one event. In addition, many of the women had been victimized before they even showed up on campus.
WATCH: The price of silence on a college campus








