1st Edition
Preventing Sexual Violence on Campus Challenging Traditional Approaches through Program Innovation
Amid the ongoing national conversation regarding campus sexual assault, this book thoughtfully explores existing programmatic interventions while wrestling with fundamental questions regarding the cultural shifts in our nation’s higher education institutions. Stressing the critical importance of student inclusion in policy decisions and procedures, scholars and experts provide complex and nuanced analyses of institutional practices, while exploring themes of race, sexuality, and sexual freedom. This volume addresses many of the unanswered questions in the present dialogue on campus sexual violence, including: What’s working and not working? How can outcomes be assessed or measured? What resources are needed to ensure success? This volume provides a truly fresh contribution for higher education and student affairs practitioners seeking to alter, design, or implement effective sexual assault prevention resources at their universities and colleges.
Contents
Foreword – Rachel Alicia Griffin
Preface
– Sara Carrigan Wooten & Roland W. Mitchell
Acknowledgements
Part I. Students as Partners and Stakeholders
- Blending Victim Advocacy and Violence Prevention when Training Student Volunteers on College Campuses
- An Academic Credit Model for Training Hearing Panels
- A Question of Consent: Engaging Men in Making Responsible Sexual Decisions
- Examining Bystander Intervention in the Wake of #BlackLivesMatter and #TransLivesMatter
- Powerful or Playful? A Case Study of Walk a Mile in Her Shoes
- Creating a Culture Shift in Response to Sexual Violence on College Campuses
- The Role of Campus-Based Advocacy and Prevention Professionals in Campus Culture Change
- A Community Approach to Sustainable Sexual Assault Prevention Strategies
- Building a Comprehensive Violence Prevention Program: Five Lessons Learned While Striving for Success
– Traci Thomas-Card & Katie Eichele
– Chris Loschiavo
– Beverly McPhail
Part II. Challenging Assumptions about Race, Gender, and Sexuality
– Adriane Bang, Annie Kerrick & Christian K. Wuthrich
– Kristina Kamis & Susan Iverson
Part III. Ending Rape Culture as a Campus-Wide Mission
– Matthew R. Shupp, Stephanie Erdice & Cecil Howard
– Lauren "LB" Klein, Jill Dunlap & Andrew Rizzo
– Mary Geller & Lori Klapperich
– Jennifer L. Graham, Melissa D. Gerrior & Carrie L. Cook
Afterword: The Anti-Campus Sexual Assault Activism Movement Under Title IX
– Laura L. Dunn
List of Contributors
Index
Biography
Sara Carrigan Wooten is a Doctoral Candidate in Educational Leadership and Research at Louisiana State University, USA.
Roland W. Mitchell is the Joe Ellen Levy Yates Endowed Professor and Interim Associate Dean for Research Engagement and Graduate Studies in the College of Human Sciences and Education at Louisiana State University, USA.
At a time when campuses from coast to coast are scrambling for information, direction, and resources, Preventing Sexual Violence on Campus offers an astute entry point in response to rudimentary yet essential institutional inquiries such as: Where do we begin? What is working well elsewhere? What should we do and how will we do it?...My hope is that you are as compelled as I was to engage with each chapter and ponder: What can we learn from Preventing Sexual Violence on Campus to change our campus culture as if lives depend on us doing so, because of course they do.
--From the Foreword by Rachel Alicia Griffin, Assistant Professor of Race and Communication, University of Utah, USA
This collection of on-the-ground efforts to address sexual violence on campus is both nuanced and novel. Preventing Sexual Violence on Campus provides balance between long-standing programs and new initiatives, offering readers a range of sexual violence prevention efforts to consider. The description of each program is sufficiently rich to encourage readers to reflect on their own practice as well as imagine new possibilities.
--Jody Jessup-Anger, Associate Professor and Program Coordinator, Student Affairs in Higher Education, Marquette University, USA