Subject: Discussion List for campus-based and allied personnel working to end gender-based violence on campus.
List archive
- From: "White, Wendi E." <>
- To: "" <>
- Subject: RE: Annual Crime Statistics
- Date: Tue, 8 Oct 2013 16:07:17 +0000
- Accept-language: en-US
|
And just to compound the fact that there are multiple internal factors discouraging accurate campus reporting, there are now applications like Campus Sentinel.
These applications allow prospective students and parents to compare Clery numbers across multiple institutions. Social media may be outflanking our efforts to educate on the importance of increased campus reporting. How do we counter the “perceptions” such
technology generates and the very real incentive it presents to keep our work under the rug?
http://www.campussentinel.com/ Wendi White Interpersonal Violence Prevention Coordinator Old Dominion University Women’s Center 757-683-4109 http://www.odu.edu/womenscenter Find us on Facebook and Twitter: "ODU Women's Center" Check out our blog:
http://oduwomenscenter.tumblr.com
Above all, thou shall not be a bystander.
-Inscription at the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C. From: Nancy Cantalupo [mailto:]
Dear Laura, Your reply from a few minutes ago reminded me that you had sent the post below last month, and I had meant to reply. My apologies for the delay, but I have
written several articles that might be helpful. You can download them for free at my SSRN site below. My basic idea for the “fix” for this problem is covered in this article:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/23/campus-sexual-assault-surveys_n_3968725.html,
which also discusses others’ similar ideas about this. The article where I set out my full analysis of the problem to which you refer and that the survey idea is designed to fix
is an article called, “Burying Our Heads in the Sand,” and the Huffington Post article links directly to it on SSRN. Hope it is helpful and I am of course happy to answer any questions or talk more about this issue. Best, Nancy Nancy Chi Cantalupo Researcher
Georgetown University Law Center
You can access my scholarship on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at:
http://ssrn.com/author=884485 From: Bernstein, Lauren (LB)
Dear Colleagues,
I feel as though there are frequently reports out there that suggest that having more reported forcible sex offenses means that one's campus is unsafe or has more
sexual violence. However, what we know is that campuses who are providing opportunities to report, including confidential ones, and for students to get help are seeing increasingly higher numbers. We also know prevalence is very high, one in four to one in
five women; one in 13 to one in 33 men. I am concerned when folks equate 0 to 1 reported sexual offenses as "safe" and 14 to 30 as "unsafe," when we know this is likely the opposite. Still, the media gets this wrong a lot, and I'm struggling to find something to point to that truly addresses this. I'm wondering: - Do you have something that you use to address the issue of more students coming forward vs. increases in sexual violence on your campus? - Do you think that we as advocates/preventionists/directors/coordinators should come together as a group to write a statement debunking some of the myths that
are being perpetuated by the media? Until we are able to see decreases in prevalence, perpetration, and victimization, I imagine that we all want to see the number of students actually being served
and telling the university increasing. Indeed, this is what much of the "putting the university on notice" and training folks to report is about. Campuses are stuck because they are accused of sweeping this issue under the rug, but those of us who are not
doing that are getting backlash for being "dangerous." Thank you for your thoughts. My best, LB Lauren (LB) Bernstein, LMSW |
Assistant Director for the Respect Program Office of Health Promotion | Emory University Student Health and Counseling Services Phone: 404-727-1514| Fax: 404-712-1519 | respect.emory.edu | 1525 Clifton Road, 103-I, Atlanta, GA 30322 The Respect Program engages the Emory community to prevent
& respond to sexual assault & relationship violence as part of the Office of Health Promotion, which facilitates student learning, engagement, and well-being and collaborating for a healthy and socially just campus environment.
|
- RE: Annual Crime Statistics, Nancy Cantalupo, 10/08/2013
- RE: Annual Crime Statistics, White, Wendi E., 10/08/2013
Archive powered by MHonArc 2.6.16.