This survey has been replicated by various different organisations including the Scottish Government and the findings are pretty consistent.
It is in this context that you should see if you can spot any differences between the headline from a press release from the University of Leicester:
And the story that resulted in the Daily Telegraph:
Notice any difference? Go on, look really hard.
In the study, psychologists at Leicester Uni asked men to consider themselves in various scenarios with a female acquaintance and find out if or when they were more likely to coerce a woman into sex. The scenarios differed with the acquaintance wearing different clothes, drinking alcohol, being aware of her previous sexual partners or her being assertive.
The main finding was that men who considered themselves sexually experienced were more likely to coerce women into sex. These men found resistance from a woman sexually arousing. Interestingly, alcohol had the opposite effect than expected with men more like to coerce sober women rather than those that were drunk.
Yet Richard Alleyne, Science Correspondent, states that alcohol has a bearing on whether men will coerce a woman into having sex. He also says:
Sophia Shaw at the University of Leicester said that men showed a "surprising" propensity to coerce women into sex, especially those that were considered promiscuous.Now, this is not in the press release and may have come from a phone interview. But it does look like he has mixed up women's promiscuity with men's. Remember, the Leicester Uni headline was "Promiscuous men more likely to rape".
So what's going on here? We already know that a large proportion of people will happily admit that under certain circumstances women are responsible for being raped (let alone those who think it but wouldn't admit it in a survey, it being a rather despicable view). So does Richard Alleyne in the Daily Telegraph just think that maintaining that belief is more palatable for his readership? Is he intentionally playing into our woman-blaming culture? He is the 'science correspondent' so you'd think he would know about study design and, you know, the results. So, he seems to have willfully misrepresented this study to again make women feel responsible for their own rape or sexual assault.
This has also been blogged on here, but they seem to have just worked from the Telegraph article rather than the press release or original study. As the headlines show above, that is never a good idea...
[And thanks to @CliveAndrews for sending the articles]
9 comments:
Journalism fail. Great article.
Alleyne's a total dunce - my theory is that he's hoping one day to knock Booker off his enormous anti-science podium and become the Telegraph's new Obfuscator-in-Chief...
Here's what Alleyne was up to last year... http://richardwilsonauthor.wordpress.com/2009/01/09/yet-more-pseudo-science-from-the-telegraph/
This link explains what happened and how Sophia stated that every single one of the first four statements made by the Telegraph is a flat, unambiguous, factually incorrect misrepresentation of her findings.
http://www.badscience.net/2009/07/asking-for-it/
@BloggerT7165 Thanks for that.
Didn't realise that the Telegraph had changed the story. Gonna post the full screen grab.
Oh poo. Some good for nothing emptied my trash with the screen grab in it. Can a nerd out there link to the cached article as that is beyond my ken.
Ben Goldacre has a great post on this in which he interviews the original author:
http://www.badscience.net/2009/07/asking-for-it/
Whoops! BloggerT7165 already got there before me - don't know how I missed that. :) Anyway, thanks for publicizing this.
Here is a list of previous Alleyne 'stories' (via Jack of Kent)
www.journalisted.com/richard-alleyne
I've been looking into the rape and sexual abuse of women in the church. Apparently rape is good for women, it's their own fault and if they're African nuns, that doesn't really count.
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