New York Daily News 8.22.16 | Toby Salk & Laura Bult The alleged 2011 attack not only left her feeling alone and confused, but she was condemned to seeing her assailant on campus while she struggled to focus on finishing school. Peterson, now
The Daily Vox 8.19.16 On Wednesday, victims and gender activists gathered at Wits University for the annual #SilentProtest against incidents of sexual violence on campus. The protest demonstrated the need for universities to take a more progressive role in addressing issues of gender-based
Fusion.Net 8.10.16 | Rob Wiles Just two months after Stanford student Brock Turner avoided prison time for raping a woman behind a dumpster, a former Colorado University-Boulder student has received a similarly light sentence for sexually assaulting an incapacitated woman. Austin James Wilkerson,
Slate 8.1.16 | Christina Cauterucci In the wake of a recent sexual assault scandal that led to the ouster of its football coach and president, Baylor University is coming under fire for a conduct code that critics say may shame sexual assault victims
GoDanRiver.com 8.7.16 | Michael Livingston At 14, Mae Gayle Daltons’ friend was sexually assaulted by an ex-boyfriend — on the grounds of a local middle school. Her friend was punished more severely than her abuser. Rape culture is defined by feminist theory as
Huffington Post 6.24.16 | Lydia O’Connor For many people, reading the Stanford University sexual assault victim’s powerful letter to her assailant was an entry point into the complicated, unjust realities of reporting and punishing sexual assault. While the attention the case — and similar
Huffington Post 2.4.16 | Jess Davidson The Call for Uniform Affirmative Consent Policies on All College Campuses I recently had an unpleasant surprise when a friend asked me, “How was it hooking up with ___________?” Feeling the familiar gut punch at the name
Livescience.com 7.5.16 | Laura Geggel, The recent Stanford sexual assault case is just one of tens of thousands of such assaults that happen every year on American college campuses, which raises the question: What can men and women do to stop rape at