Perception of University Students Regarding Gender-Based Violence: Identification, Analysis and Detection
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Abstract
The general objective of the study is to study the degree of gender-based violence that exists
among students at the University of Huelva. The sample of 678 students (540 women and 138 men)
answered an anonymous and voluntary questionnaire, which was made up of several validated
questionnaires. The results show that many of the students have rarely suffered or carried out any
type of violent behavior in their relationships, although there is a very low percentage who claim to
have suffered gender-based violence, so we can affirm that it is a phenomenon present to a greater or
lesser extent. It is observed that students easily relate physical aggressions to gender-based violence
while they hesitate to relate psychological aggressions to it. This difficulty can be supported by
other studies that state that adolescents believe that some actions of psychological violence—such as
being jealous—are simply signs of love. This is compounded by the large number of romantic myths
that are increasingly spread through social networks, media, family patterns, etc. More educational
interventions are therefore needed to prevent these outcomes from leading to unhealthy relationships
disguised as excessive romanticism.
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Bibliographic citation
García-Rojas, A. D., Hernando-Gómez, A., Montero-Fernández, D., & Rodríguez-Vargas, S. (2024). Perception of University Students Regarding Gender-Based Violence: Identification, Analysis and Detection. In Sexes (Vol. 5, Issue 4, pp. 758–768). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes5040048














