The nonoperation of antipornography statutes in four states (Maine, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Washington) for varying
periods between 1973 and 1986 provided an opportunity to examine the impact of such statutes and pornography availability
on sex crimes because nonenforcement is associated with an increase in the availability of sexually explicit materials. Arrests
for property offenses and for rape, prostitution, and other sex offenses during the period before the suspension of the laws,
when compared with the period during suspension, reflected no significant changes. Findings are consistent with other foreign
and American studies that have failed to find a link between exposure to sexually explicit media materials and rates of reports
of rape and other sex offenses.
Key Words rape - pornography - nexus effects - sexually explicit media
This research was supported by PSC-CUNY Research Award 66212 from the City University of New York to Charles Winick.