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Re: Blind versus anonymous reporting


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Kristie M Wyatt <>
  • To: Juliette Grimmett <>
  • Cc: Eric Hartman <>, , Allison Tombros Korman <>,
  • Subject: Re: Blind versus anonymous reporting
  • Date: Wed, 21 Sep 2016 07:11:45 -0400
  • Authentication-results: fort02.mail.virginia.edu; spf=pass (virginia.edu: domain of designates 209.85.215.47 as permitted sender)

We call our online report anonymous, but include the option for folks to include their name or the perpetrator's.

Kristie Wyatt
Wellness Education Coordinator

office: King 128A
phone: 336.316.2879

   


On Sep 20, 2016 10:29 PM, "Juliette Grimmett" <> wrote:
Hello colleagues -

I am working with Culture of Respect to help them develop some best practice guides for college campuses.  We are working through our recommendations around reporting options for survivors, and I am wondering if folks would be willing to share their thoughts around the difference (or lack of difference) between filing an anonymous report versus a blind report.  Do you use these terms interchangeably?  Do you define them differently and if so, in what ways?  

I always understood them to be different, that an anonymous report meant both the survivor and perpetrator(s) were unnamed and a blind report meant the survivor was still unnamed but the perpetrator(s) were identified.  However I am learning that for some campus and community police, an anonymous report is a blind report.

Any information you can share would be greatly appreciated!

Thank you

--
Peace,

Juliette Grimmett, MPH
Chrysalis Network, Founder
CORE Constructs Consulting Developer, Culture of Respect


(919) 624-9575
www.chrysalisnetwork.com 
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