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The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa

Despite various research studies on rape investigation and prosecution, as well as the treatment/mistreatment of victims, it remains a concern in South Africa. Victims often hesitate to disclose incidences of sexual violence, and those who do face challenges in being believed or having their cases h...

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Main Author: Albanie, Zethu
Other Authors: Omar, Jameelah
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Sociology 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Albanie, Zethu
author2 Omar, Jameelah
author_browse Albanie, Zethu
Omar, Jameelah
author_facet Omar, Jameelah
Albanie, Zethu
author_sort Albanie, Zethu
collection Thesis
description Despite various research studies on rape investigation and prosecution, as well as the treatment/mistreatment of victims, it remains a concern in South Africa. Victims often hesitate to disclose incidences of sexual violence, and those who do face challenges in being believed or having their cases heard in court. This difficulty arises from the inherent complexity of proving rape, contributing to a pervasive mistrust of rape victims. This issue is particularly troubling for Black women, as the colonial-generated perception of their bodies portrays sexual violence as an expected outcome of their ordinary sexual behaviours, categorising them as supposedly immune to rape. Black women are consequently displaced as victims of rape due to their historic hyper-sexualisation and over-sexualisation. The objective of this thesis is to comprehend the plight of Black rape victims within the criminal justice system. I contend that, due to the myth of the unrapeable Black woman, Black rape complainants must fight for credibility in the eyes of the criminal justice system actors. Stereotypically based judgements continue to negatively impact perceptions and decision-making concerning the rape of Black women. Utilising personal narrative-focused research and sharing my experiences as a Black rape complainant in South Africa, this thesis contends that the criminal justice system's judgements of Black women's rape experiences mirror broader societal attitudes towards rape and race. The study aims to elicit a critical, constructive assessment of the criminal justice system's culture and practices to improve the societal response to victims of sexual violence, thus preventing the miscarriage of justice for Black rape complainants. This study advocates for the decolonisation of the criminal justice system by examining its adherence to colonial ideals. Keywords: Rape, Black women, Unrapeable, Criminal Justice System, South Africa
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:26.764Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Sociology
publisherStr Department of Sociology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40169 The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa Albanie, Zethu Omar, Jameelah Sociology Despite various research studies on rape investigation and prosecution, as well as the treatment/mistreatment of victims, it remains a concern in South Africa. Victims often hesitate to disclose incidences of sexual violence, and those who do face challenges in being believed or having their cases heard in court. This difficulty arises from the inherent complexity of proving rape, contributing to a pervasive mistrust of rape victims. This issue is particularly troubling for Black women, as the colonial-generated perception of their bodies portrays sexual violence as an expected outcome of their ordinary sexual behaviours, categorising them as supposedly immune to rape. Black women are consequently displaced as victims of rape due to their historic hyper-sexualisation and over-sexualisation. The objective of this thesis is to comprehend the plight of Black rape victims within the criminal justice system. I contend that, due to the myth of the unrapeable Black woman, Black rape complainants must fight for credibility in the eyes of the criminal justice system actors. Stereotypically based judgements continue to negatively impact perceptions and decision-making concerning the rape of Black women. Utilising personal narrative-focused research and sharing my experiences as a Black rape complainant in South Africa, this thesis contends that the criminal justice system's judgements of Black women's rape experiences mirror broader societal attitudes towards rape and race. The study aims to elicit a critical, constructive assessment of the criminal justice system's culture and practices to improve the societal response to victims of sexual violence, thus preventing the miscarriage of justice for Black rape complainants. This study advocates for the decolonisation of the criminal justice system by examining its adherence to colonial ideals. Keywords: Rape, Black women, Unrapeable, Criminal Justice System, South Africa 2024-07-02T10:08:20Z 2024-07-02T10:08:20Z 2024 2024-06-19T12:53:28Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40169 Eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Sociology
Albanie, Zethu
The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
title_full The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
title_fullStr The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
title_short The Unrapeable Black Woman: Understanding The Plight Of The Black Rape Complainant In Contemporary South Africa
title_sort unrapeable black woman understanding the plight of the black rape complainant in contemporary south africa
topic Sociology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40169
work_keys_str_mv AT albaniezethu theunrapeableblackwomanunderstandingtheplightoftheblackrapecomplainantincontemporarysouthafrica
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