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What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa

One in every three South African teenagers has experienced sexual violence but how they respond to their victimisation remains a paradoxical yet pivotal question. Teenagers must decide whether to seek (in)formal support following being raped, which has implications for their protection, health, and...

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Main Author: Eichstedt, Anneke
Other Authors: Moult, Kelley
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Public Law 2025
Subjects:
Law
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access_status_str Open Access
author Eichstedt, Anneke
author2 Moult, Kelley
author_browse Eichstedt, Anneke
Moult, Kelley
author_facet Moult, Kelley
Eichstedt, Anneke
author_sort Eichstedt, Anneke
collection Thesis
description One in every three South African teenagers has experienced sexual violence but how they respond to their victimisation remains a paradoxical yet pivotal question. Teenagers must decide whether to seek (in)formal support following being raped, which has implications for their protection, health, and well-being. However, the role of adolescent rape survivors as decision-makers remains under-investigated. Therefore, this study aims to understand the multifaceted factors that influence the decision-making on safety, response, and the pursuit of justice by teenage girls following sexual victimisation. Drawing from interviews with female teenage survivors of sexual violence (n=40), caregivers of survivors (n=11), key informants working in the field of sexual violence (n=16), and adolescent peer educators (n=18), my primary research question examines the underlying ‘how' and ‘why' of the post-victimisation decision-making on safety, response, and justice by South African teenagers; and how Bourdieu's theoretical concepts of habitus, capital, field, and practice offer a novel framing for understanding their decision-making following sexual victimisation. Through the lens of Bourdieu's ‘Theory of Practice', I foreground the adolescent decision-maker and show that the context in which experiences are gained, tendencies are developed, and resources are acquired matters for how they respond to rape. The findings suggest that the teenagers' decisions are not made in a vacuum, isolated from the violence happening all the time, all around them. Growing up in some of South Africa's most violent and marginalised communities, they learn how to navigate crime, recognise sexual violence, seek safety, and cope with deficiencies in resources, which becomes the foundation for their decision-making following being raped. I argue that responding to dangerous situations has become a routinised practice for the young women, and that understanding their post-rape decisions requires paying attention to their everyday reality as a source of routine, socialising experiences, available support and monetary resources, sources of information, and recourseseeking options within their communities. None of these experiences and conditions alone sufficiently explains the decision-making, but it is the interplay between learning, support, information, resources, and safety provisions and response that explains how and why teens respond to their sexual victimisation
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40896 What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa Eichstedt, Anneke Moult, Kelley Law One in every three South African teenagers has experienced sexual violence but how they respond to their victimisation remains a paradoxical yet pivotal question. Teenagers must decide whether to seek (in)formal support following being raped, which has implications for their protection, health, and well-being. However, the role of adolescent rape survivors as decision-makers remains under-investigated. Therefore, this study aims to understand the multifaceted factors that influence the decision-making on safety, response, and the pursuit of justice by teenage girls following sexual victimisation. Drawing from interviews with female teenage survivors of sexual violence (n=40), caregivers of survivors (n=11), key informants working in the field of sexual violence (n=16), and adolescent peer educators (n=18), my primary research question examines the underlying ‘how' and ‘why' of the post-victimisation decision-making on safety, response, and justice by South African teenagers; and how Bourdieu's theoretical concepts of habitus, capital, field, and practice offer a novel framing for understanding their decision-making following sexual victimisation. Through the lens of Bourdieu's ‘Theory of Practice', I foreground the adolescent decision-maker and show that the context in which experiences are gained, tendencies are developed, and resources are acquired matters for how they respond to rape. The findings suggest that the teenagers' decisions are not made in a vacuum, isolated from the violence happening all the time, all around them. Growing up in some of South Africa's most violent and marginalised communities, they learn how to navigate crime, recognise sexual violence, seek safety, and cope with deficiencies in resources, which becomes the foundation for their decision-making following being raped. I argue that responding to dangerous situations has become a routinised practice for the young women, and that understanding their post-rape decisions requires paying attention to their everyday reality as a source of routine, socialising experiences, available support and monetary resources, sources of information, and recourseseeking options within their communities. None of these experiences and conditions alone sufficiently explains the decision-making, but it is the interplay between learning, support, information, resources, and safety provisions and response that explains how and why teens respond to their sexual victimisation 2025-02-10T11:37:08Z 2025-02-10T11:37:08Z 2024 2025-02-10T11:36:15Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40896 Eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Law
Eichstedt, Anneke
What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
title_full What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
title_fullStr What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
title_short What the f*ck just happened? : A study of the post-rape decision-making on safety, response and justice by adolescent girls in South Africa
title_sort what the f ck just happened a study of the post rape decision making on safety response and justice by adolescent girls in south africa
topic Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40896
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