Abstract
The purpose of the present study is to conduct a preliminary assessment of the characteristics of Chinese women’s victimization in sex offenses using data collected from two surveys of criminal victimization in the cities of Beijing and Tianjin in 1992 and 2004, respectively. The assessment analyzes the demographic characteristics of female victims in such offenses and the characteristics of their victimization. The data from the Beijing and Tianjin surveys are compared in the analysis. The results show a shift in the demographic pattern between the two surveys, which may be related to the dramatic change in China’s transformation to a state-directed market economy during the time period. However, the data from both surveys indicate some similar characteristics of sex offenses against women in contemporary urban China. Some of these characteristics significantly differ from those discovered in the United States.
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