{"source":{"name":"Evidence Hub on Social Media Ban for Kids - A project by the Lisbon Council","url":"https:\/\/socialmediaban.lisboncouncil.net","license":"Creative Common CC-BY 4.0 International"},"data":[{"data":[94.6,3.66],"name":"2023"},{"data":[98.71,0.76],"name":"2024"}],"_data":[["Category",2023,2024],["Female",94.6,98.71],["Male",3.66,0.76]],"labels":{"values":["Female","Male"]},"metadata":{"link":"https:\/\/inhope.org\/media\/pages\/home\/data-insights\/4d2f6f4817-1767872796\/inhope-annual-report-2024.pdf","type":"","unit":"Percent (%)","year":"2024","title":"Victim Demographics by Biological Sex","topic":"Harms and Wellbeing","method":"online records reported to the INHOPE system","source":"INHOPE Annual Report 2024","sub_topic":"","chart_number":"20","geographical":"World"},"description":"Female victims continued to be overwhelmingly represented, comprising 98.71% of reported cases, an increase from 94.60% in 2023. In contrast, the percentage of male victims has decreased significantly, dropping from 3.66% in 2023 to just 0.76% in 2024. Cases involving both sexes have also declined slightly, representing 0.53% of reports. These trends highlight the persistent disproportionate representation of female victims while reflecting a sharp decrease in male victims and a minor reduction in cases involving both sexes."}