RT Article T1 Patterns of Gender Equitable Attitudes and Behaviors Among Young Men: Relationships With Violence Perpetration and Masculinity Ideologies JF Violence against women VO 30 IS 9 SP 2174 OP 2199 A1 Casey, Erin A. A1 Willey-Sthapit, Claire A1 Hoxmeier, Jill C. A1 Carlson, Juliana A2 Willey-Sthapit, Claire A2 Hoxmeier, Jill C. A2 Carlson, Juliana LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1891167294 AB This study used latent profile analysis with data from 481 U.S. men to examine patterns of men's attitudes toward gender equity and their engagement in gender-equitable (GE) behaviors. Five resulting profiles included groups with (a) high endorsement of both GE attitudes and behaviors, (b) low endorsement of both, (c) mid-range endorsement of both, (d) strong endorsement of GE attitudes, but low engagement in action, and (e) low endorsement of GE attitudes but high participation in GE behavior. Worryingly, this last group reported higher rates of violence perpetration than other groups, while simultaneously reporting higher rates of participation in gender-based violence prevention actions. K1 Sexual Violence K1 violence perpetration K1 Masculinity K1 gender equitable behaviors K1 gender equitable attitudes K1 gender equity DO 10.1177/10778012231153359