This paper extends our understanding of how university students make sense of, and respond to, sexual violence in the night-time economy (NTE). Based on semi-structured interviews with 26 students in a city in England, we examine students’ constructions of their experiences of sexual violence within the NTE, exploring their negotiations with, and resistance to, this violence. Building upon theories of postfeminism, we interrogate the possibilities for resistance within the gendered spaces of the NTE and propose a disaggregated conceptualisation of agency to understand responses to sexual violence, thereby offering useful insights for challenging sexual violence in the NTE and in universities.


 

University of Lincoln, College of Social Science Research

Sundari Anitha, University of Lincoln, School of Social and Political Sciences

Ana Jordan, University of Lincoln, School of Social and Political Sciences

Jill Jameson, University of Lincoln, Social and Political Sciences

Zowie Davy, De Montfort University