According to a 2017 report from
Amnesty International, 27% of women in the
United Kingdom had received "direct or indirect threats of physical or sexual violence" and 47% reported receiving "sexist or misogynistic abuse".
Online harassment Rape threats are often made online via social media as a form of
online harassment, especially against women. According to English columnist
Laurie Penny, "every female writer she knows has received threats of violence and rape." According to Karla Mantilla, editor of the academic journal
Feminist Studies, "Rape and death threats are so common that they are almost the rule rather than the exception when women are trolled or harassed online." According to one study of 134,000 abusive comments on social media, 88% were found to occur on the platform
Twitter, another 8% occurred on
Facebook, and the remainder on various forums and blogs. Another review by
Demos identified 100,000 uses of the word rape on Twitter between December 2013 and February 2014 and estimated that 12% of them were threatening. Another examination found that 9% of women in Australia and 9.6% of women in the United Kingdom reported receiving "comments, email or text messages threatening sexual assault". For the UK, this was more common for women age 20 to 24 (%19.6) followed by women age 25 to 29 years of age (%17), while in Australia women age 40 to 44 was the most affected group (%13.5).
Against politicians According to a 2016 study of lawmakers from 39 countries by the
Inter-Parliamentary Union, 44.4% of elected female representative had been threatened with rape or violence while in office, and 65.5% reported that they had received "humiliating remarks of a sexual or sexist nature" either "several times" or "often". One respondent in particular reported that they had received over 500 online rape threats via the social media platform
Twitter over the course of four days. Also in 2018, in connection with the
Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court nomination, the offices of a number of US politicians received threats of violence and rape, including that of
Dianne Feinstein. In 2014 Indian actor and Member of Parliament
Tapas Paul issued a public apology after threatening to "let loose [his] boys" to rape members of the opposing
Communist Party of India. A widespread social media campaign was launched in support of
Ghanaian Supreme Court Justice Georgina Theodora Wood following public rape threats against her. In the United Kingdom, Member of Parliament
Jess Phillips has called for an end to anonymity for Twitter users after receiving over 600 rape threats in a single night. In 2018, Deserae Morin, a Republican who ran for the
Vermont House of Representatives, received a letter that called her a "cunt" and said, "First, we will rape you for days. You will scream and know that agonizing horror."
In college In a review of two national studies of college women in the United States, Fisher found that the incidence rate of verbal threats of rape was reported for between 0.01% and 0.48% of respondents. In a 2000, the
US Department of Justice's published the results of their The Sexual Victimization of College Women, in which they collected data on four types of threats: • Threat of rape - Threat of unwanted penetration with force and threat of force. • Threat of contact with force or threat of force - Threat of unwanted sexual contact with force and threat of force. • Threat of penetration without force - Threat of unwanted penetration with the threat of nonphysical punishment, promise of reward, or pestering/verbal pressure. • Threat of contact without force - Threat of unwanted sexual contact with the threat of nonphysical punishment, promise of reward, or pestering/verbal pressure. The results indicated that 0.31% had received rape threats, compared with 1.7% who had been the victims of rape. In total, 0.18% had been threatened with contact using force or threat of force, 0.22% had been threatened with penetration without force, and 0.34% had been threatened with contact without force. They found that, of those who had received rape threats, 54.8% occurred off campus, and that 81% of those who received rape threats had taken measures to protect themselves, but that 90.5% of cases were not reported to police. The most common reasons for failure to report threats to police were that: • The victim did not think the incident was serious enough to report (35.8%) • It was unclear if the action was a crime or that harm was intended (39.5%) • Victims did not think police would take the report seriously (34.2%) • The victim did not want other people to know (34.2%) • Because of a lack of proof that the incident had occurred (31.6%) • The victim did not feel that the police would want to be bothered (31.6%) ==Legal history==