RT Article T1 A Qualitative Study on Friends and the Social Context of Sexual Victimization: Implications for Campus-Based Interventions JF Violence against women VO 27 IS 11 SP 2092 OP 2110 A1 Blayney, Jessica A. A2 Jenzer, Tiffany A2 Read, Jennifer P. A2 Livingston, Jennifer A2 Testa, Maria A2 Carroll, Quinn LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1767144040 AB Sexual victimization (SV) risk can begin in social contexts, ones where friends are present, though it is unclear how friends might be integrated into SV prevention. Using focus groups, female college drinkers described (a) the role of friends in preventing SV, (b) the strategies friends use to reduce vulnerability, and (c) the barriers to implementation. Friends-based strategies (keeping tabs on one another, using signals to convey potential danger, interrupting escalating situations, taking responsibility for friends, relying on male friends) and barriers (intoxication, preoccupation, situation ambiguity, social consequences) were discussed. Interventions can draw on these strategies, but must address the critical barriers. K1 protective strategies K1 college women K1 Sexual Victimization DO 10.1177/1077801220954277