Publications by authors named "Lee M Johnson"

Article Synopsis
  • Research indicates that U.S. and Canadian college students face various types of victimization, with Canadian students at a higher risk compared to their U.S. counterparts.
  • The study uses data from the American College Health Association to analyze how individual and school characteristics affect victimization risk.
  • Findings reveal that while some school-level factors influence the risk for both countries, there are differences in which factors are most significant for U.S. and Canadian students.
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Introduction And Aims: Although alcohol use has been linked to sexual victimisation among college students , the specific ways in which college students may be able to avoid the negative consequences of excessive drinking as they relate to sexual victimisation have not been fully explored. This study examines whether using protective behavioural strategies attenuates the risk of sexual victimisation for both male and female college students and whether this relationship is moderated by alcohol use.

Design And Method: Data were obtained from the Fall 2012 National College Health Assessment Survey.

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Although the risk of being violently victimized in college has been established for college students in the United States in general, this risk has not been explored for international college students. Using data from the Fall 2012 National College Health Assessment Survey, the extent to which international college students experience violent victimization is assessed. In addition, the risk factors for violent victimization for international students are compared with those for domestic students.

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The authors investigated (a) whether victim blaming is a general variable in a person's make-up or (b) whether the extent of blaming depends on the kind of victim considered. The authors evaluated scales for blaming (a) victims in general, (b) society in general, (c) a specific kind of victim (i.e.

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