The Influence of Offender Motivation on Unwanted Pursuit Perpetration Among College Students

This study uses lifestyle/routine activities to examine unwanted pursuit perpetration. Regressions were completed on the full sample, and separately for males (3,485) and females (4,022), and for those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ = 607) and those who do not (non-LGBTQ = 6,900). Sex (males), race (minorities), and unwanted pursuit victimization were associated with unwanted pursuit perpetration. Several identities by victimization interactions were also significantly associated with increased unwanted pursuit perpetration. Coefficient tests also revealed significant differences across sex (race, victimization, race by victimization, and LGBTQ by victimization) and across LGBTQ status (sex by victimization and race by victimization).

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Work Title The Influence of Offender Motivation on Unwanted Pursuit Perpetration Among College Students
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Kim S. Ménard
  2. Adam Christensen
  3. Deborah D. Lee
Keyword
  1. Stalking
  2. Perpetration
  3. College students
  4. Sexual minorities
  5. LGBTQ
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Victims and Offenders
Publication Date October 31, 2023
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1080/15564886.2023.2268620
Deposited February 12, 2024

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Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Added Menard_et_al__2023__The_Influence_of_Offender_Motivation_on_Unwanted_Pursuit_Perpetration_Among_College_Students.pdf
  • Added Creator Kim S. Ménard
  • Added Creator Adam Christensen
  • Added Creator Deborah D. Lee
  • Published
  • Updated Keyword, Publication Date Show Changes
    Keyword
    • Stalking, Perpetration, College students, Sexual minorities, LGBTQ
    Publication Date
    • 2023-01-01
    • 2023-10-31
  • Updated