I think you might be confused, OP is speaking about the link which is talking about the sex of the perpetrator, your image is of the sex of the victim. Your link never talks about the perpetrators of sexual violence, as they probably wanted a different page dedicated to it (which OP links).
It is actually quite disturbing as while theoretically we know that most sexual violence against women is perpetrated by men unto women, missing that stat limits our analysis if we are only looking out the outcome of a crime rather than a class perpetuating it.
As an example I'd also turn to a study I read on sexual assault/harassment in a lab workplace. One large survey only took the victim's sex, and the sex of the boss at the workplace, but not the perpetrator. Another survey of the same style did indicate the sex of the perpetrator. What was found from the latter survey was that while women were quite significantly victimized by men, the most common perpetrator for sexual violence against men was also men (in this case). It also found that vertical harassment was more common for female victims (i.e., by a person in higher authority) vs Lateral for male victims (i.e., by one's peers). Though of course, both can and did occur. It also shows another dynamic in that, it is likely that men were more likely to be elevated in status above women career wise and so can benefit both fiscally and socially from the power of said positions.
This analysis would not be there at all had the sex of perpetrator not been recorded.
The absolute insanity of RAINN’s stats on perpetrators of sexual violence never once mentioning sex even though they analyze age, ethnicity, relationship to the victim (of ambiguous sex, apparently), and the types of violence used….the largest anti-sexual violence organization in the USA simply avoiding the statistics of sex-based offending and victimization…they are literally ignoring the epidemic of male violence against women in order to ????? why?????
Drawing reference
A quick Hot Tip for drawing shoes from me; a man who enjoys looking at shoes maybe too much
It’s good to draw some kind of foot looking shape before you draw shoes so they’re like the right size and shape but sometimes I see people draw soles as like flat things hovering under the feet but if you look at your own shoes you’ll see that the inside of your shoes are not flat, they’re bottom of your foot shaped and your feet sink into them a bit so they’re comfortable and not like slapping an oval block of wood to your foot
So the outside band on shoes is usually somewhere higher than you might think
Of course in many real shoes there’d be a bit of an arch from a raised up heel or something, so I probably should have drawn some feet instead of lazying out, but hopefully you get the idea.
@danielledesireexoxo
Inspired by Filipino tribal jewelry, specifically the Lumad tribe.
This is so lovely!
~fionahsieh
Inspiration is THIS you?
My roommate bought a pack of 24 rolls of toilet paper yesterday, in addition to the half dozen we already had, and stored all of them in the bathroom. And just let me tell you, there’s something incredibly calming and reassuring about looking next to you while you’re on the toilet and seeing 30 rolls of toilet paper sitting there. You get a feeling like, no matter how bad shit gets in there, you’re always going to make it out okay in the end.
100 year old abandoned Masonic castle located in upstate New York [980x490]
this ↑
Can you rec some of your favorite books?
sure thing!!
middle grade
percy jackson and the olympians by rick riordan
a monsters call by patrick ness
matilda/ the witches by roald dahl
young adult
penryn and the end of days by susan ee
the darkest minds by alexandra bracken
the infernal devices by cassandra clare
the rest of us just live here by patrick ness
before i fall by lauren oliver
six of crows by leigh bardugo
shatter me by tahereh mafi
the wrath and the dawn by renee ahdieh
the naturals by jennifer lynn barnes
and i darken by kiersten white
all our yesterdays by cristin terrill
we are the ants by shaun david hutchinson
at the edge of the universe by shaun david (currently reading this)
new adult
addicted series by krista and becca ritchie
aerial ethereal by krista and becca ritchie
touch by natalia jaster
managed by kristen callihan
cyclone series by courtney milan
beginner’s guide: love and other chemical reactions by six de los reyes
adult
the hating game by sally thorne
vicious by v.e. schwab
classic lit
to kill a mockingbird by harper lee
the great gatsby by f. scott fitzgerald
frankenstein by mary shelley
night by elie wiesel