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Sexual Experiences Survey×Inventario de Sexismo Ambivalente×Gender-Based Violence Survey×
CampoGender StudiesPsicología socialGender Studies
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen198219962005
Autor originalMary P. Koss & Cheryl J. OrosPeter Glick and Susan T. FiskeWHO (García-Moreno, Jansen, Ellsberg, Heise & Watts) and the DHS Program
TipoBehaviorally specific self-report instrumentSelf-report Likert scalePopulation-based prevalence survey
Fuente seminalKoss, M. P., & Oros, C. J. (1982). Sexual Experiences Survey: A research instrument investigating sexual aggression and victimization. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 50(3), 455–457. DOI ↗Glick, P., & Fiske, S. T. (1996). The Ambivalent Sexism Inventory: Differentiating hostile and benevolent sexism. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70(3), 491–512. DOI ↗García-Moreno, C., Jansen, H. A. F. M., Ellsberg, M., Heise, L., & Watts, C. H. (2006). Prevalence of intimate partner violence: Findings from the WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence. The Lancet, 368(9543), 1260–1269. DOI ↗
AliasSES, Koss Sexual Experiences SurveyASIGBV Survey, Violence Against Women Survey, VAW Prevalence Survey
Relacionados243
ResumenThe Sexual Experiences Survey (SES) is a self-report instrument developed by Mary P. Koss and Cheryl J. Oros in 1982 to measure sexual aggression and victimization using behaviorally specific items rather than legal or stigmatizing labels. Instead of asking whether someone was 'raped', it asks about concrete acts and the tactics used to obtain them, ordering experiences along a severity continuum from unwanted sexual contact through verbal coercion to attempted and completed rape. It exists in matched victimization (SES-V) and perpetration (SES-P) versions, with widely used revised short forms (SES-SFV and SES-SFP) released after the 2007 collaborative revision.The Ambivalent Sexism Inventory (ASI) is a 22-item self-report measure developed by Peter Glick and Susan T. Fiske in 1996 to assess both hostile and benevolent sexism toward women. The scale captures the dual nature of sexism: overtly antagonistic attitudes and paternalistic but ultimately restrictive attitudes that present themselves as protective. It has become widely used in gender studies and organizational research.Gender-based violence (GBV) and violence-against-women prevalence surveys are standardized, population-based instruments designed to estimate how many people — overwhelmingly women — experience physical, sexual, and emotional violence by intimate partners and others. The dominant designs are the WHO Multi-country Study on Women's Health and Domestic Violence and the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) domestic-violence module. They measure violence through behaviorally specific acts rather than the word 'violence', and they are conducted under strict ethical and safety protocols that govern who is interviewed, how, and where.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Sexual Experiences Survey · Ambivalent Sexism Inventory · Gender-Based Violence Survey. Recuperado el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare