One UVA Presentation 3-2015
Transcription
One UVA Presentation 3-2015
Gender-Based Violence • What Is It • UVA Policies • Resources for Survivors Claire N. Kaplan, PhD Director, Gender Violence and Social Change Program Sexual Misconduct at UVA: • is defined broadly to include all acts of non-consensual sexual contact (including non-consensual sexual intercourse), sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, dating or domestic violence (also known as relationship violence), and stalking.* *University of Virginia Policies and Procedures for Student Sexual Misconduct Complaints Sexual Assault • can be any form of forced or non-consensual physical or emotional sexual contact involving threats, intimidation, pressure, or coercion. • Rape is a type of sexual assault usually involving sexual intercourse which is initiated by one or more persons against another person without that person's consent. • Rape is the least reported of all violent crimes. • Nine out of ten offenders in cases of heterosexual rape or sexual assault were known to the victim (boyfriend, ex-boyfriend, classmate, friend, acquaintance or co-worker). • 7% of college women who experience drug, alcohol, or incapacitated rape report it to the police. • Of those cases reported to the police, less than 10% of rape cases result in criminal charges against a defendant. SSN Training Manual, page 29 Child Sexual Abuse: • is defined as sexual activities between a legal adult and a child (less than 18 years of age) which are intended to erotically arouse the adult, without consideration for the reactions or choices of the child; • often involves bodily contact, such as sexual kissing, touching, fondling of genitals, and oral, anal and vaginal intercourse; • may also include non-contact behaviors, such as genital exposure (“flashing”), verbal pressure for sex, and sexual exploitation for pornography or prostitution. • The average age for first abuse is 9.9 years for boys and 9.6 years for girls. Victimization occurs before age eight in over 20 percent of the cases. Another study found 24 percent of female child sexual abuse survivors were first abused at age five or younger. • SSN Training Manual, page 41 Intimate Partner Violence/Dating Violence: • is a pattern of physically, sexually, and/or emotionally abusive behaviors used by one individual to maintain power over or to control another person in the context of an intimate or family relationship. • Estimates range from 960,000 incidents of violence against a current or former spouse, boyfriend, or girlfriend per year to three million women who are physically abused by their their husband or boyfriend per year in the US. • Among female students between the ages of 15-20 who reported at least one violent act during a dating relationship, 24 percent reported experiencing extremely violent incidents such as rape or the use of weapons against them. • In the North Carolina study, women who had been physically assaulted in any year of college were significantly more likely to be sexually assaulted that same year. SSN Manual, pages 10 & 17 Stalking • is behavior wherein an individual willfully and repeatedly engages in a knowing course of harassing conduct directed at another person, which reasonably and seriously alarms, torments, or terrorizes that person. • involves one person's obsessive behavior toward another person. Initially, stalking will usually take the form of annoying, threatening, or obscene telephone calls, emails or letters, and covert surveillance of the victim. • 1,006,970 women and 370,990 men are stalked annually in the U.S. • 77% of female victims and 64% of male victims know their stalker; of these; 59% of female victims and 30% of male victims are stalked by an intimate partner. • 73% of intimate partner stalkers verbally threatened victims with physical violence, and almost 46% of victims experienced one or more violent incidents by the stalker. SSN Training Manual, page 23 Incidence of Sexual Violence Among UVa Students Mapping Adverse Childhood Experiences Survey (ACE) data onto UVA student population suggests: • 2,875 female students may have experienced contact sexual assault, before arriving at UVa • 1,650 male students may have experienced contact sexual assault, before arriving at UVa Mapping Campus Sexual Assault Survey data onto UVA student population suggests: • 400 female UGs may experienced sexual assault yearly • 1,000 current female UGs may have experienced sexual assault while enrolled at UVa • 1,340 current female UGs may have experienced sexual assault before enrollment at UVa Mapping NIPSVS1 data onto UVA student population suggests: • • • • 127 on-Grounds female students aged 18-25 who may be raped each year 607 female UGs who may have been raped before matriculation 192 current female UGs who may have been raped while enrolled at UVa 4,565 of the 11,500 female students, almost four in ten, who may have experienced sexual assault during their lifetime 1National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey: 2010 Summary Report Sexual violence among UVA faculty members: 1000 females, 1700 males Lifetime prevalence of victims and perpetrators by sex1 Violence Type Rape Female Vic/ms 183 UVa Perpetrators against females Male Female 61 4 Male Vic/ms 24 UVa Perpetrators against males Male Female 5 0.2 Comp. forced penetra/on 123 15 A<empt forced pen. 52 7 Alcohol/drug facilitated 80 10 (3.6%) (0.07%) (0.26%) (0.02%) 446 82 7 377 30 27 * 82 3 13 Sexual coercion 130 102 3 17 Unwanted sexual contact 272 199 19 21 Unwanted non-‐contact sex 337 218 21 16 (8.2%) (0.71%) (1.78%) (2.67%) 143 7 401 35 27 Weighted Incidence2 Other Made to penetrate Weighted Incidence2 Life9me Prevalence 629 Definition of Trauma Individual trauma results from an event, series of events, or set of circumstances that is experienced by an individual as physically or emotionally harmful or threatening and that has lasting adverse effects on the individual's functioning and physical, social, emotional, or spiritual well-being. - SAMHSA [Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration] The Nature of Trauma The conflict between the will to deny horrible events and the will to proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of psychological trauma. People who have survived violence often tell their stories in a highly emotional, contradictory, and fragmented manner that undermines their credibility and thereby serves the twin imperatives of truth-telling and secrecy. Traumatic events call into question basic human relationships. They breach the attachments of family, friendship, love, and community. They shatter the construction of the self that is formed and sustained in relation to others. They undermine the belief systems that give meaning to human experience. They violate the victim’s faith in a natural or divine order and cast the victim into a state of existential crisis. -Herman, Judith (1997)Trauma and Recovery Trauma Shatters Our Assumptions • Safety: Do I live in a safe world? • Meaning: Why did this happen? • Loss of control/Death: I and/or other people are vulnerable and not in control of everything. • Pain: Why is there suffering? • Identity: Who am I if this can happen to me/in my world? • Free will: Who is responsible for this trauma? Trauma Shatters Our Assumptions • The college student who experiences a sexual assault or trauma commonly loses his/her dream of what college would be. • To others, the person who has been assaulted may appear to be emotionally over-reactive, acting out (excessive drinking, drugs or sex), clingy, distant, unengaged, or disconnected. How Can I Help? SSN Training Manual, page 57 Resources On Grounds • Office of the Dean of Students – Sexual Misconduct Board – Advocacy, support and guidance • Equal Opportunity Programs – Sexual misconduct investigations • Maxine Platzer Lynn Women’s Center – Counseling Services [trauma specialists] – Survivor Support Group for Faculty/Staff [jointly run with Women’s Center] – Gender Violence and Social Change Program [victim advocacy and accompaniment, case management, Survivor Support Network training for faculty, staff, students, Gender Violence and Social Justice course, publications, prevention and awareness education] • Counseling and Psychological Services – Short-term counseling for survivors – Survivor Support Group for Students [jointly run with Women’s Center] Resources Off Grounds • Sexual Assault Resource Agency – 24/7 hotline – Counseling, advocacy, hospital accompaniment (all services free) • Shelter for Help in Emergency – 24/7 hotline – Counseling for shelter residents and non-residents – Crisis shelter for women and children; emergency housing for male survivors of IPV; medical clinic on site; transitional housing – Court accompaniment and case management • Victim-Witness Programs – Support for victim/survivors throughout criminal justice process, whether or not case is taken to trial How We Work with Trauma at the Women’s Center • Establishing safety is the first priority • Goals that help the student or staff/faculty member feel in charge of the process • Move out of isolation and re-establish social connections • Move into some type of action that is meaningful to them • Trauma Stewardship Advocacy: Creating Safety for Survivors • Be up front at the start regarding your role (as a Responsible or Confidential Employee) and explain that role; • Respect confidentiality within the limits of your role; • Listen to, believe, and affirm survivors’ experiences; • Avoid judgmental statements and questions that imply bias (“why did you…” “you should….”) • Acknowledge the injustices and remind survivor that they are not at fault; SSN Training Manual, 51 Advocacy: Creating Safety for Survivors Allow survivors to prioritize their own goals; Provide assistance in locating resources and services; Respect their rights; Brainstorm options to resolve problems but let them take the lead and respect their choices; • Foster feelings of confidence, control, competence, and self-help • The most important thing you can do is to listen without judgment. You may be the first person to have done this. • • • • How Do We React When We Hear About Trauma? Feeling helpless and hopeless “I can never do enough” Rigid thinking: It is either this or that – no middle ground Physical issues Anger and cynicism Numbing Survivors of this violence may be unconsciously triggered by what they hear and react instinctually