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Reporting Sexual Assault: Can Knowledge of How to Protect Forensic Evidence Influence Intentions to Report?
Emma J. McQueen,
Sally F. Kelty
Psychology
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
3
Citations (Scopus)
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of 'Reporting Sexual Assault: Can Knowledge of How to Protect Forensic Evidence Influence Intentions to Report?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Sexual Assault
100%
Forensic Evidence
100%
Reporting Sexual Assault
100%
Adult Sexual Assault
60%
Theory of Planned Behavior
40%
Lay Knowledge
40%
Medical Forensics
40%
Police Notification
40%
Canberra
20%
University Students
20%
School Students
20%
Self-efficacy
20%
Community Members
20%
Values Education
20%
Online Survey
20%
Victimization
20%
Subjective Norms
20%
High Prevalence
20%
Social Norms
20%
Conviction Rates
20%
Criminal Jurisdiction
20%
Value Reporting
20%
Sexual Assault Victimization
20%
Potential Victim
20%
Psychology
Sexual Assault
100%
Theory of Planned Behavior
22%
Self-Efficacy
11%
Subjective Norm
11%
Social Norm
11%