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New survey finds campus assaults less than thought

WASHINGTON - A new survey of young Americans by Harvard's Institute of Politics casts doubt on the widely repeated statistic that one in five women in college is a victim of sexual assault.

WASHINGTON - A new survey of young Americans by Harvard's Institute of Politics casts doubt on the widely repeated statistic that one in five women in college is a victim of sexual assault.

The one-in-five figure comes from a survey conducted in 2007 for the Justice Department at two large public universities, one in the Midwest and the other in the South. The researchers who conducted the study, who did not name the two schools, cautioned that their findings might not be applicable nationwide, but the figure has, nonetheless, been featured in presidential speeches, social-media campaigns, and numerous articles.

The new survey, part of a series that the Institute of Politics has done on the attitudes and experiences of young Americans, reports that 11 percent of female respondents ages 18 to 29 said they had been the victim of a sexual assault.

Despite the attention focused on assaults on campus, the survey found that the rate of sexual assault was twice as high among women who had not attended college as among college students.

Among women age 18 to 29 who did not attend college, 12 percent said they had been sexually assaulted, while among those currently enrolled in college, 6 percent said they had been targets of such assaults.

Of those who said they had been assaulted, 9 percent said the assault took place on a college or university campus.

"It's not just a college problem," said Mariel Klein, a Harvard sophomore who helped conduct the survey.

The work was overseen by John Della Volpe, the director of polling at the institute.

The survey also reported that 3 percent of men age 18 to 29 said they had been sexual-assault victims.

Researchers use surveys to try to determine the prevalence of sexual assaults because the crime remains significantly underreported. In the Harvard survey, 38 percent of white women age 18 to 29, 36 percent of blacks, and 55 percent of Latinos said they had never reported their assaults to anyone.

Both the current survey and the 2007 one were conducted using Internet-based computer interviews, rather than telephone calls. The use of Web-based surveying, which provides more anonymity to respondents, may result in more accurate reporting of assaults, researchers believe.

The one-in-five statistic from 2007 includes both completed and attempted sexual assaults. In that study, just under 14 percent of the women surveyed said they had experienced a completed assault.