Topic > Sexual Violence Prevention - 1322

Sexual Violence Prevention: at Alabama State University Sexual violence is a major problem on college campuses. This will examine plans to investigate the prevalence of sexual violence at Alabama State University, as well as the systems and procedures in place to address it. College women are more likely to experience sexual violence. According to a recent study conducted by the National College Women Sexual Victimization, between twenty and twenty-five percent of women will most likely be a victim of sexual violence while in college. Every sexual incident that happens in institutions should be reported immediately. Over the years, America has developed sexual violence at every university, from HBCUs to mainstream foundations. The institution must make distinctive choices to prevent them from happening again. Many people have this perception of sexual violence and therefore believe that they are generally immune from the risk of sexual violence in their communities. This is undoubtedly a case at ASU, where female students reported that they “actually felt safe at ASU,” and this was woefully wrong. The goal is to bring to light issues related to the extreme relevance of sexual violence that still exists in universities, as well as provide a proposal for how grassroots organizations on university campuses can better respond to sexual violence in light of the momentum of research and encounters with survivors. Alabama State University needs better sexual assault prevention because our campus should be safe for students attending. Individuals should not worry that their lives are at risk. This is why a sexual assault prevention coordinator will be placed at our university. Context and history Furthermore, the story of ... half of the document ... and uncertainty and will be denied the help, recognition and admiration they deserve. Tragically, they will find no comfort there because these pioneers have been standardized into the same society as rape perpetrators. Not only do we now understand that female students experience this threatening environment; they also have a superior understanding of why so few individuals, particularly those in the force, are attempting to change things. The countless years of socialization in a patriarchal social order incessantly fortify men with a feeling of dominance and privilege, and when these states of mind are combined with the need to ensure the notoriety of the college on the name of the perpetrator. It's almost whimsical that change happens. In this way the question is no longer what is happening with sexual violence or how things went in this context