Difference between revisions of "Street harassment"

From Wiki 4 Men
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Street harassment''' is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men. While claims of this behavour are common, proof is lacking. The site '''stopstreetharasment''' lists only surveys, questionnaires and polls as evidence.<ref>http://www.stopstreetharassment.org/resources/statistics/statistics-academic-studies/</ref>
+
'''Street harassment''' is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men. The founder of the site ''stopstreetharassment'' undertook two anonymous online surveys and found results that claim street harassment is very common, with 38% of women participating in these surveys claiming to have been harassed by way of ''honking and whistling'' within the last month. Surveys like this are deeply flawed:
  +
  +
* They rely on subjective self-reporting
  +
* They involve a selection bias in that people who see relevance in online survey are far more likely to take part in the survey
  +
* They can involve leading questions intended to elicit a particular answer
  +
* Having been undertaken by someone who has a known bias the research is immediately suspect
  +
  +
While claims of this behavour are common, proof is lacking. The site '''stopstreetharassment''' lists only surveys, questionnaires and polls as evidence.<ref>http://www.stopstreetharassment.org/resources/statistics/statistics-academic-studies/</ref>
   
 
== References ==
 
== References ==

Revision as of 10:53, 14 April 2014

Street harassment is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men. The founder of the site stopstreetharassment undertook two anonymous online surveys and found results that claim street harassment is very common, with 38% of women participating in these surveys claiming to have been harassed by way of honking and whistling within the last month. Surveys like this are deeply flawed:

  • They rely on subjective self-reporting
  • They involve a selection bias in that people who see relevance in online survey are far more likely to take part in the survey
  • They can involve leading questions intended to elicit a particular answer
  • Having been undertaken by someone who has a known bias the research is immediately suspect

While claims of this behavour are common, proof is lacking. The site stopstreetharassment lists only surveys, questionnaires and polls as evidence.[1]

References

<references>