More than half of women in Ireland reported experiencing sexual violence in their lifetime, according to the Central Statistics Office.
According to the CSO’s Sexual assault Survey, 40% of adults experience sexual assault at some point in their lives, with women more likely to suffer it (52%) than males (28%).
In comparison to older persons, younger people reported greater rates of sexual violence, with 22% of those aged 18 to 24 reporting both adult and childhood sexual abuse compared to 8% of those 65 and older.
Four times more women (21%) than men (5%) reported experiencing non-consensual sexual intercourse over their lifetime.
One in 10 women experienced non-consensual sexual intercourse as an adult when they were unable to give consent.
Almost one in five (17%) men aged 25-34 experienced non-consensual sexual touching as an adult.
One in five adults experienced unwanted contact sexual violence as a child (20%) and a similar number experienced unwanted non-contact sexual violence (19%).
More than three quarters of adults who experienced sexual violence at least once in their lifetime knew the perpetrator, and this figure differed little between women and men.
Fewer than half of adults who experienced sexual violence in their lifetime told someone about it.
Examples of the sexual violence experiences include a teenager persuading a friend to watch a pornographic video on their phone when they did not want to see it, someone being persuaded to undress or pose in a sexually suggestive way for photographs as a child, a young woman being made to touch another person’s genitals without her consent, and a man being threatened to have sex.
CSO statistician Helen McGrath said: “We appreciate that behind the data in today’s publication are a range of individual stories, which speak to the lived experience of those who have, and those who have not, experienced sexual violence.
“The publication today provides a lot of important detail and insight on a very serious and sensitive societal issue.”
Sexual violence was defined in the survey as a range of non-consensual experiences, from non-contact experiences to non-consensual sexual intercourse.
The CSO invited a sample of 12,665 people to participate in the survey and received 4,575 responses.
The CSO expressed appreciation to everyone who took part in the survey.
It noted that approximately 500 people indicated they had not disclosed their sexual violence experiences to anyone prior to the survey.
“We are grateful to those people for placing their trust in us, to all those who took part in the survey, and everyone who contributed to this project,” it said.
More information on how the survey was conducted and how it defined sexual violence is available on the CSO website.