Fraternity House and Sports Team Rape Only Getting Worse

Fraternity House and Sports Team Rape Only Getting Worse

 

As Frat Houses and Sports Team’s see that rape and abuse leads to only a minor slap on the hand, or a faculty-organized cover-up, the rape-culture trend has been rising.

Is it time to close down all of the Fraternity houses and make coaches legally liable for the acts of their teams?

Rich family elites want to push the message that “there is no campus rape crisis” because they did it, their parents did it and their kids are doing it now because they are “privileged”. Campus rape and privileged elitism is what rich families get to have.

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FOOTBALL CAUSES RAPE. COACHES TEACH RAPE. FRAT HOUSES DATE-RAPE.
EVERY 8 MINUTES, A SPORTS TEAM MEMBER RAPES A GIRL!!!!!!!! ENACT THESE LAWS!
EVERY DAY OVER 70 GIRLS ARE RAPED IN MILITARY GROUPS.

Some of the hundreds of thousands of cases:

Stanford University traffics young women from sorority houses to Frat houses and sports houses via mini buses which acquire packs of women, at night, from sorority houses under threat of loss of “popularity”, threat of loss of “prestige” or threat of being ostracized and other peer pressure. Stanford recruiters select some women, with low test scores, as “bait” to be used to attract “Athletes” from rich families so that Stanford can get the money from those rich families. The “bait women” are chosen for their looks and figures rather than their academic potential. The mini bus trafficking has been documented in the movie: The Social Network and other media. The men at the sports frat house are trained by the seniors in spiking drinks with “roofies”, ultra-high alchohol content tequila and other intoxicants. Each frat house has a special basement, attic or bedroom designated for rape with a special door knob flag to show when it is being used.

In Steubenville, Ohio, Two 16-year-old members of the town’s high school football team are charged with raping a girl in August and making a mocking video of it. Special prosecutors from the state attorney general’s office allege the teens sexually assaulted the girl while she was unconscious. The boys laughed that she was dead in the video and treated the knocked out girl like a piece of trash.

Across the United States, tens of thousands of lawsuits have been filed by boys and girls raped by their school sports teams or officials. In almost every single case, the administrative officials created a cover-up and delayed action on the charges.

Rather than make a huge list on this page just do this:
1. Go to http://www.google.com
2. In the search window enter: “Sports team rape”
3. Read what comes up.

You will be horrified how standardized the rape of the innocent is among sports teams.


I know a lot of people get really defensive when athletics are brought into the discussion. Remember that athletics is not the problem – but cultures that glorifies athletes more than anything else. A common statistic is the increase
in domestic assaults and rapes during the Super Bowl. What athletes do reflects on our society – and influences others. By the way, what is this “No Fear” garbage? Personally I love fear – it reminds us of mortality and tempers our actions from dangerous extremes. —
Aaron
 
 
OUT OF BOUNDS: THE TRUTH ABOUT ATHLETES AND RAPE 
BY JILL NEIMARK

Meg Davis was gang raped in the spring of her freshman year by seven members of the university’s football team – guys she used to hang out with at fraternity parties. “I knew the guys I ‘buddied’ with sometimes had group sex, and that they even hid in a closet and took pictures of the event,” she says now, “but I never thought it would happen to me.” She was sexually assaulted for nearly three hours. She blacked out as she was being sodomized, and came to later with a quarterback’s penis in her mouth. When she tried to push him off, he shouted, “Hey, what are you doing? I haven’t come yet!” Back at the dorm that night, she says, “I took shower after shower. I stayed in until there was no hot water left. I felt so dirty. Even so, I didn’t call what happened to me rape. These were guys I knew. It wasn’t until I went to a woman’s center in town that someone explained I’d been gang-raped.”

Men have been raping in gangs for centuries, from Russian solders in Germany and American solders in My Lai, to the infamous gang of boys “wilding” in New York’s Central Park two years ago. When we think of group rape, it is exactly those packs of men who come to mind. But these days a disproportionate number of gang rapes are being committed by men whom we look to as our heroes, whom we laud and look up to for their grace and power and seeming nobility: young male athletes.

Psychologist Chris O’Sullivan, Ph.D., of Buckness University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania,  studied 26 alleged gang rapes that were documented between 1980 and 1990, and found that fraternity groups committed the highest number, followed by athletic teams. In addition, she found that “the athletes who do this are usually on a
star team, not just any old team. It was the football team at Oklahoma, the basketball team at Minnesota, the lacrosse team at St. John’s. It seems to be our most privileged athletes – the ones, by the way, most sought after by women
– who are often involved in gang rape.
 
From June 1989 to June 1990, at least 15 alleged gang rapes involving about 50 athletes were reported. Among the most publicized cases: At Berkeley, a freshman claimed she was raped and sodomized in a dark stairwell, among shards of a shattered light bulb, and then dragged by her assaulted – a member of the football team – to his room, where three teammates joined him. In Glen Ridge, New Jersey, four high-school athletes – all of them former football teammates – have been charged with wielding a small baseball bad and a broomstick to rape a 17-year-old slightly retarded girl. In Washington, D.C., a 17-year-old girl maintained, four members of the Washington Capitals hockey team assaulted her  after the team was eliminated at the Stanley Cup play-offs (but none were  indicted by a grand jury); and at St. John’s University in New York, five members of the lacrosse team (plus one member of the rifle club) were accused of
raping a student.

In spite of surging publicity about the phenomenon, athletes accused of rape usually escape with little more than a reprimand. Virtually every athlete accused of participating in a gang rape insists that it was not rape: He says
the victim wanted group sex. She asked for it. Juries and judges seem to agree, for charges are often dropped. Pressing charges is crucial for rape victims’ recovery. “A guy gets suspended for half a season and then he’s back,”
notes Ed Gondolf, Ed.D., a sociologist at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania and author of Man Against Woman: What Every Woman Should Know About Violent Men (Tab Books, 1989). In the occasional gang rape cases that proceed to prosecution, notes Claire Wals, Ph.D., director of Campus and Community Consultation, and organization in St. Augustine, Florida, that specialized in presenting rape-prevention workshops across the country, “convictions are very difficult and rare.”

 “This act is so heinous,” explains Dr. Walsh, “that we don’t want to admit we have this kind of brutality in our culture. We don’t want to believe our athletes are capable of this. So we immediately rename it, call it group sex, and perform a character assassination on the victim. It’s her fault – no matter what the circumstances.” What professionals involved in studying gang rape are beginning to understand is that there seems to be something very specific about the
gloriously physical, sometimes brutal camaraderie of team sports that can set the stage for brutal act.

One clue to the trigger for such an act may lie in the dynamics of the team experience itself: You don’t find gang rape among tennis players or swimmers or those who participate in other solo sports. According to Bernice Sandler, Ph.D.,
director of the Project on the Status and Education of Women at the Association of American Colleges, it is athletes on football, basketball and hockey teams who are most prone to group rape. Athletes who work and play together – hours
each day, for months and years – become profoundly bonded. I remember my first, and only, outsider’s taste of this bond: I was the sole woman attending a stag party for former rowers on the Yale crew team. I was the play waitress. The men wore nothing but loincloths. They were told to gulp down as many shots of whiskey as they could when they walked in the door. Then they slathered one another with mud and beer and spent much of the evening wrestling with a kind of wild, erotic joy. These guys never once talked about women. I went home shaken but, I admit, also envious. I knew I would never experience that raw, physical abandon with my own sex.

One rape victim recalls a similar experience. The group of athletes and fraternity brothers who later raped her, she said, used to dance a tribal dance in a darkened room, finally collapsing on one another in a heap. The “circle” dance,
as it was called, was ecstatic and violent. “They’d be jumping up and pounding the ceiling and singing a song that began, ‘When I’m old and turning gray, I’ll  only gang-bang once a day.'”

Most psychologists believe that powerful male bonding is the essence of gang rape – that, in fact, the men are raping for one another. Peggy R. Sanday, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania anthropologist and author of Fraternity Gang
Rape
(NYU Press, 1990) explains: “They get a high off doing it with their ‘brothers.'” The male bonding in these groups is so powerful and seductive that,  says Dr. Walsh “one man leads and the others follow because they cannot break
the male bonds.” Those men present who don’t rape often watch – sometimes even videotaping the event. And, explains Gail Abarbanel, L.C.S.W., director of the Rape Treatment Center at Santa Monica Hospital in California, “There has never been a single case, in all the gang rapes we’ve seen, where one man tried to stop it.” Even the voyeur with a stab of guilt never reports his friends.  “That’s the crux of group rape,” explains Abarbanel. “It’s more important to be part of the group that to be the person who does what’s right.”

But there is more to team gang rape than male bonding. These athletes see the world in a special way – a way that actually legitimizes rape. They develop a powerful subculture founded on aggression, privilege and the scapegoating of women. Friendship is expressed though hostile teasing one player calls “busting.” And, according to Dr. O’Sullivan, “Sports fosters this supermasculine attitude where you connect aggression with sexuality. These men see themselves as more aggressive. I talked to one pro-basketball player who says that for years he raped women and didn’t know it. Sex was only satisfying if it was a conquest.”

According to Dr. Gondolf, who was also a football player, “For some athletes there’s an aggression, a competition, that’s heightened in team sports. You come off the field and your adrenaline is still flowing, you’re still revved up, and some of these guys may expect to take what they want by force, just like they do on the field.” Dr. Gondolf says that he recalls certain movements from his team as a player, “where the whole team was moving as one, where we became part of a collective whole, rather than individuals.”

Within that collective whole, according to experts and some athletes themselves, one way the men can demonstrate their power is by scapegoating women.” There was a lot of classic machismo talk,” recalls Tommy (names have been changed), now 24, who played on the football team at Lafayette College in Pennsylvania. “The talk was very sexist, even threatening. I recall some guys sharing that they were really drunk as a big excuse for having sex with a girl everyone thought was a dog. The guy would say, ‘I had my beer goggles on.” He’d act like he was embarrassed, but the fact was he did have sex, so it was a bragging kind of confession.”

The pressure to score is powerful. Months after one gang rape had taken place, one of the men who had participated in it was still uneasily lamenting his impotence that night. Dr. Gondolf recalls how some men tended to talk about scoring on and off the field as if they were the same thing: “Abuse of women became the norm – not necessarily out of meanness, but because we saw the person as an opponent, an object to be maneuvered. Because the camaraderie among us was so important, we never questioned or challenged one another when these things came up. I
remember hearing about forced sex, group sex, naked showers with women, and the  tendency was to shrug your shoulders or chuckle. The locker-room subcultures fed on itself.”

And when the adrenaline rush of the field does get translated to a sexual assault,  Dr. Gondolf theorizes, ” a high definitely takes over during the rape, and it has a neutralizing effect. There is enough momentum present that it negates any guilt, fear or doubt. The man thinks to himself, “Oh, we’re just having a good time, nobody’s gonna get hurt.’ It’s the same rationalization men use when they beat or abuse their wives: ‘She had it coming, she asked for it, she didn’t get hurt that bad, I was drunk, it wasn’t my fault.'”

What is perhaps most difficult to comprehend about gang rape is that the men involved don’t feel guilty; they don’t see this act of group violence as rape. May Koss, Ph.D.,a University of Arizona psychologist, studies over 6,000 students at
32 universities and found that 1 of 12 college males admits to acts legally defines as rape ar attempted rape, and yet only 1 out of 100 admits they have raped or attempted rape. “Of the one hundred thirty-one men who had committed
what we would legally define as rape,” says Dr. Koss, “eighty-four percent argued that what they did was definitely not rape.”

In many of the team-gang-rape cases around the county, the athletes involved readily, almost eagerly, admitted they’d had sex with the victim. In fact, they seemed to offer up their confessions as juicy tidbits. One witness in a case
against members of the Kentucky State football team, in which all the men were  found not guilty, testified that guys had lined up in the hall holding their crotches and saying, “Me next.” And in an Oklahoma case, a player testified that
he saw three former teammates – who were also subsequently acquitted – take turns having sex with a screaming girl, saying, “If we have to, we’re going to take some from her.” In many of the cases the athletes described how they viewed their victim as different from other women: cheap, a slut, a whore. Many quoted the old cliché, “When she says no, she really means yes.” Usually they’d heard she was “easy” – sometimes because a teammate had already slept with her. At Kentucky, teammate testified that he’d had oral sex with the victim three days before the alleged rape. “Any woman who would do that would do anything.” he’d said. In fact, according to Dr. O’Sullivan, “Some of these guys are really sweet. They can be very nice to other women in their lives. But one a woman is in this category, it’s almost as if she isn’t a human being. All their beliefs say it’s okay to abuse her.”

I found the same disturbing paradox when I interviewed athletes. When confronted with the abstract idea of rape, these men use words like “shattering, disgusting, immoral.” (Jay, 25, a former football player at the University of
Rochester, said, “I’ll tell you something, I’d never even dream of doing anything like that, it makes me sick to my stomach.” But if they personally know of a case involving their teammates, they’re curiously lenient and forgiving. A
former starting quarterback at Lafayette College recalled rumors of a gang rape by his teammates on campus. “From what I understand she came on to one of the guys. Not that this justifies it, but she did like one of the guys who allegedly raped her, and she was willing to come up to the room with him” Even when I interviewed an old friend of mine, formerly on an Ivy League tack team, he mentioned offhandedly that some members of his team had shared a girl with a baseball team in Alabama, which “offered” her to the visitors. My friend never questioned where it might have been rape: He assumed the girl was willing.

One possible reason for the astounding lack of guilt among athletes who rape is the special privilege accorded a star athlete – and the constant female adoration he attracts. “The ‘hotshot syndrome’ is inevitably part of team sports,” says Dr. Gondolf. “If you’re an athlete in college, you’re given scholarships, a nice dorm, doctors, trainers, a lot of support and attention and fans and cheerleaders who ogle you. That sense of privilege influences you, and some guys
may then think. ‘I deserve something for this. I can take women, the rules don’t  apply to me.’ They feel they’re above the law.”

 “I  used to have girls call me up,” says former quarterback Jay, “and say, ‘I go to  football games and watch you, I look at your picture in the program, I’m writing a paper on you.’ I happened all the time. You get this attitude where you can do anything you want and nobody is ever going to say anything to you.”


Coaches  and universities contribute to the athlete’s unique sense of entitlement. As Dr. Walsh notes, “When we’re talking about athletic teams and gang rape, we see how,  time after time, the entire community comes to the support of the team. Athletes  are very important in the fabric of a campus or town. They keep alumni  interested, and produce money for the community.”

New  studies are showing that there is no such thing as a typical rape victim. Many  women who are raped in college are virgins, according to Mary Koss’s study – and the vast majority (75 to 91 percent) of rape victims cannot be differentiated from nonvictims in terms of risk factors like personality or circumstance. Women are often raped in the “honeymoon” period, however: those first few months of school when they’re learning to negotiate their new world. And drinking is almost always involved; in fact, states Dr. Walsh, “alcohol is used deliberately to impair the woman.” At parties, punch is massively spiked with liquor – to the point where some rape victims complain that they had only two drinks before they passed out drunk. One victim at San Diego State University recalls asking for a  nonalcoholic beverage. Instead she was brought punch spiked with Everclear, a  95-percent-alcohol drink that is illegal in California.

But if outside observers have difficulty finding common attributes among victims of team rape, it seems clear that the men themselves have an unspoken code that divides women into classes – the nice-girl girlfriend and the party-girl rape victim. The scare part is that the cues are so hidden most women are completely unaware of them – and the rules may be different among different teams,  different campuses, different locker rooms. Athletes will sometime let drop a
few clues: Usually a woman is more vulnerable if she’s had sex with one of the group before; if she’s buxom, wears tight clothes and lots of makeup; if she’s from a college that has a certain reputation. One fraternity actually stuck
colored dots on women’s hands as they came to a party, color-coded to indicate how “easy” each woman was. It’s that kind of hidden code that has more and more colleges warning young women to say away altogether from the fraternity and house parties where athletes and their buddies gather – just as one must avoid dark alleys at night. Dr. Gondolf explains: “Athletes are so tangled up in their glory and their privilege, and they get such big benefits for it. We need women to prompt them to check up on one another.” But that is only half the  answer.

In the case of gang rape, almost all college women are so devastated they drop out of school. “These are overwhelming rapes, and the trauma is profound,” explains Abarbanel. “A lot of these women are freshmen who are just beginning to test  their independence. They have hopes and drams about college and achievement,
meeting new people, a career, a future. After gang rape, everything that college means is lost to them. They’re afraid to be alone, afraid of a recurrence. And  since these are often men they know, the sense of betrayal is very
profound.”

In some cases, says Dr. Sanday, a woman may have subconsciously been courting danger. She knows she should avoid certain parties, be careful about her drinking, come and leave with friends. But she’s looking for power, on male
territory. “We all, at certain times in our life, test ourselves. It’s like going into the inner city on a dare. These women are using the men that way. They want to court and conquer danger. And legally and morally, they have a
right to go and have sex with whomever they want, without being gang raped.”


One  of the most important ways to prevent rape may be to understand what the word means. Many men and women don’t know that the law requires that a woman give consent to sexual intercourse. If she’s so inebriated that she can’t say  yes, or so frightened that she won’t say no, the act is rape.

 But  just knowing that distinction is not quite enough; the seeds of team gang rape are buried deep, even subconsciously, in the athletic culture. Dr. O’Sullivan tells of an incident outside the courtroom of the Kentucky State football-team trial. According to her, “We were all standing by the candy machine, and some guy mentioned that it was broken. And Big Will, a huge man who had charmed everybody, and who was testifying in behalf of his dormmate, said, ‘I’ll make it work. Everybody always does what I want.’ And everybody laughed. I couldn’t believe it. This is exactly the kind of attitude that can lead to the rape.” The perception that force is “okay,” that it is masculine and admirable, is really where gang rape begins – and where the fight against it will have to
start.

 For  more information on gang rape, contact MOSST (Multiple Offender Survivor Survey and Treatment), headed by Claire Walsh, at 904-471 0283, or write to the Women’s Counseling Service, 2306, Southwest 13th street, Suite 9, Gainesville, FL 32601. All requests for information will be kept confidential.


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Culture: Why Are Some Fraternities More Dangerous Places for Women?”  Gender
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2011.

Cara.  “Sports Rape Culture Keeps On Thriving.”  The Curvature.  9
July 2008.  Web.  12 December 2011.

“Cheerleader Required to Cheer for Man Who Assaulted Her.”  Ms Magazine
Blog
.  15 October 2010.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Curry, Timothy Jon.  “Fraternal Bonding in the Locker Room: A Profeminist
Analysis of Talk About Competition and Women.”  Sociology of Sport
Journal
8 (1991): 119-135.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Farmer, Paul.  “Pathologies of Power.”  University of California Press:
Berkeley, 2003.

Finkelman, Abby.  “Sports and the Culture of Rape.”  The Chronicle:
Student News at The College of Saint Rose
.  18 October 2011.  Web.  12
December 2011.

Halloran, Jessica.  “When a woman cries rape, a football code turns itself
into a fortress.”  Sydney Morning Herald.  7 July 2008.  Web.  12
December 2011.

Harding, Kate.  “When sports culture meets rape culture.”  Salon
24 July 2009.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Kimmel, Michael.  “Men, Masculinity, and the Rape Culture.”  Transforming
a Rape Culture
.  Ed. Emilie Buchwald, Pamela R. Fletcher, Martha Roth. 
139-157.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Kolker, Robert.  “Out of Bounds.”  New York Magazine.  27 October
2003.  Web.  12 December 2011.

McMahon, Sarah.  “Student-Athletes, Rape-Supportive Culture, and Social
Change.”  Department of Sexual Assault Services and Crime Victim Assistance
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
.  October 2004.  Web.  12
December 2011.

Neimark, Jill.  “Out of Bounds: The Truth about Athletes and Rape.” 
InteractiveTheatre.org.  Web.  12 December 2011.

“Penn State Teaches Rape Culture 101.”  Ms Magazine Blog.  17
November 2011.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Rose, Scott.  “A Cheerleader’s Rape in Silsbee, Texas: The Victim on Trial.” 
Ms Magazine Blog.  15 June 2011.  Web.  12 December 2011.

Rovell, Darren.  “Demand for Duke lacrosse gear soars.”  ESPN.  19
April 2006.  Web.  12 December 2011.

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http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/exchange/node/11608

 

The Solutions That Work:

1. Shut down high school and college sports. Cut their funding off.

2. Allow no girls near sports players without a chaperone.

3. Enact laws in your state that the Coach of any sports team accused of rape by even one member will automatically go to jail for a minimum of two years.

4. Enact laws in your state that the parents of a boy who engages in rape will go to jail for a minimum of one year.

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Opinion: Teach young men to treat women with respect

Punish the parents even more: Opinion: Why don’t some boys see it as rape?

‘CHANGE THE LAW: Arcane’ 1872 California law cited in overturning rape conviction

Opinion: End culture of rape in 2013


If you are a parent and you have a cute daughter you are sending to college, expect her to have at least 4 rape, date-rape, forced intoxication attempts during her term at college. Often there will be many more. She will never confess these situations to you and she will damaged for life because of them. You, as a parent, have the money that the college needs to survive, join with other parents and demand that all organized male sports programs be shut down or you will cut off their funding.

High schools and colleges use sports teams to get money from parents with meathead kids who won’t study but who will beat on people in competition events. Parents with money and meathead kids will pay anything to get the ego rush of having the kid be good at something. Each is using the other for unethical means.

 

Links to help with Rape Issues:

Prevent Rape – JustYellFire.com  www.justyellfire.com/We’re Teaching Girls To Fight Back Against Predators And Date Rape

CALL “911”

Write a letter on Facebook or Twitter and expose it.

Publish a report about it in your local paper.

Say it out-loud at sports events, church meetings, PTA’s and Street Fairs, put a table or booth up at these events and make it public.

Organize a march outside sports arena’s and sports fields.

Wear T-Shirts in groups at Malls.

Do something. Do not be quiet.

 

 

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A Rape on Campus – Rolling Stone

The Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism report investigating the failures of Rolling Stone’s UVA rape story has arrived.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.rollingstone.com.icorollingstone.com/culture/features/a-rape-on-campus-what-we…

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Campus Sexual Violence Resource List | National Sexual …

Campus Sexual Violence Resource List ….. • • • . .. . • . • … …. Language Undefined Language. English; Español; SAAM Happenings. Follow Us. NSVRC Home. Request …

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.nsvrc.org.iconsvrc.org/saam/campus-resource-list

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College rape: Campus sexual assault is a serious problem. But …

Sexual assault on campus is a serious problem. But efforts to protect women from a putative epidemic of violence have led to misguided policies that infringe on the civil rights of men.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.slate.com.icoslate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2014/12/college…

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Rape Crisis on Missoula Campus – TIME.com

The college town of Missoula, Montana, saw at least 80 reported rapes over three years, earning it the name “America’s Rape Capital.” But the nickname has it wrong. Missoula isn’t special; it is fairly average Practically overnight, Missoula went from being the home of one of the nation’s

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/time.com.icotime.com/100542/the-sexual-assault-crisis-on-ameri…

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campus sexual assault: why don’t victims go to the police?

Senator Claire McCaskill hosts a round table to address how and when law enforcement should be brought into campus sexual assault cases

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/time.com.icotime.com/2905637/campus-rape-assault-prosecution/

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Acquaintance Rape of College Students – Center for Problem …

Jeanne Cleary’s rape and murder on a college campus brought to light some of the inadequacies both in knowledge of the problem and in college reporting of crime. Stranger rape of college students is less common than acquaintance rape.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.popcenter.org.icopopcenter.org/problems/rape

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Campus Rape Reports Are Up, And Assaults Aren’t The Only …

Data from the Department of Education show an increase in sexual assault reports, but college officials say new federal guidelines are helping more students come forward.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.npr.org.iconpr.org/2014/04/30/308276181/campus-rape-reports-…

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Campus rape | MetaFilter

This broke my heart. Deplorable, disgusting, hypocritical (“community of trust” my ass), and one of the most egregious “campus fails its sexual assault victims” articles I’ve ever read (how sad there are enough to be a category).

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.metafilter.com.icometafilter.com/144666/Campus-rape

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Is Columbia Failing Campus Rape Victims? – The Daily Beast

Is Columbia Failing CampusRape Victims? … They carried mattresses in solidarity with Columbia senior Emma Sulkowicz, who has been lugging one around campus since the beginning of the semester. It’s a symbol, she says, …

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.thedailybeast.com.icothedailybeast.com/articles/2014/11/06/is-columbia-failing-c…

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Every college parent’s fear: Campus rape | Fox News

Like millions of Americans, I recently dropped my daughter off to college for her freshman year. She was brimming with excitement and hope. I was troubled with gnawing apprehension, if not fear.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.foxnews.com.icofoxnews.com/opinion/2014/09/25/every-college-parent-f…

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Time for young feminists to look beyond the mattress and …

Time for young feminists to look beyond the mattress and campusrape. Commentary; Opinion; Feminism; Boko Haram; Columbia University; University of Virginia; … We learned about high-profile rape cases at Vanderbilt and the University of Montana, …

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.latimes.com.icolatimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-daum-mattress-girl-me…

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Sexual Assault Statistics – Campus Safety

Here are some important sexual assault statistics that can help your institution make informed decisions when developing policies to protect your campus community.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.campussafetymagazine.com.icocampussafetymagazine.com/article/Sexual-Assault-Statistics-and-Myths

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Preventing campus rapes: Our view – USA TODAY

Preventing campusrapes: Our view. An obvious advice for both men and women is often omitted: Binge drinking can be risky.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.usatoday.com.icousatoday.com/story/opinion/2014/08/04/campus-rape-bing…

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The Revolution Against Campus Sexual Assault — The Cut

Emma Sulkowicz, who will not put her mattress down until her alleged rapist is expelled, is its new public face. … was crafting a strong campusrape bill, asking for more protection for students and higher penalties for colleges, slated to come to the floor in late 2014 or 2015. For certain …

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/nymag.com.iconymag.com/thecut/2014/09/emma-sulkowicz-campus-sexu…

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Why the Campus Rape Crisis Confounds Colleges | The Nation

During her freshman year at Occidental College in Los Angeles in 2010, Audrey Logan says, she was raped on two separate occasions by a young man she considered a friend.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.thenation.com.icothenation.com/article/180114/why-campus-rape-crisis-con…

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The Columbia Student Who Protested Her On-Campus Rape Carried …

Emma Sulkowicz may not have received the justice she was looking for after her on-campusrape, but today she certainly took her protest to the next level.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.eonline.com.icoeonline.com/news/658243/the-columbia-student-who-prot…

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LA Times Columnist: Campus rape victims need to stop focusing …

Newspaper opinion sections are full of half-baked arguments and tepid hot-takes on last week’s news, but Meghan Daum’s column in the Los Angeles Times this week “Time for young feminists to look beyond the mattress and campusrape” is particularly obnoxious.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/laist.com.icolaist.com/2015/05/27/lat_columnist_suggests_campus_…

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campus rape panel | rights of accused | due process

Some on CampusRape Panel Think Students Accused of Rape Have too Many Rights. Students accused of rape have too many rights, say some at campusrape panel.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/collegeinsurrection.com.icocollegeinsurrection.com/2015/03/some-on-campus-rape-panel-think-s…

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End the excuses: an academic’s views on campus rape.

Campusrape is an epidemic in America. Former President Jimmy Carter, who teaches at Emory University, recently spoke out about it.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/seanmunger.com.icoseanmunger.com/2014/05/09/end-the-excuses-an-academics-v…

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“The Newsroom” ‘s Crazy-Making CampusRape Episode – The New…

“The Newsroom” ‘s Crazy-Making CampusRape Episode. By Emily Nussbaum. Jeff Daniels, Sam Waterston, and Thomas Sadoski in “The Newsroom.”

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.newyorker.com.iconewyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/the-newsroom-cra…

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campusrape.com/

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.campusrape.com.icocampusrape.com

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Our Team — END RAPE ON CAMPUS

End Rape on Campus (EROC) is a survivor advocacy organization dedicated to ending sexual violence through survivor support, public education, and policy and legislative reform.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/endrapeoncampus.org.icoendrapeoncampus.org/our-team/

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The Newsroom Tackles Campus Rape, and the Results Are Horrifying

There was nothing good about Sunday’s episode, but its level of misguided self-regard almost made it must-see TV.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.theatlantic.com.icotheatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/12/the-newsroo…

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ABC Family’s Campus Rape Storyline Goes Where Scripted…

Switched at Birth, which kicked off a multi-episode arc last night about campusrape featuring one of its main characters, might just be the bravest show on television.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.buzzfeed.com.icobuzzfeed.com/jacelacob/abc-family-switched-at-birth-ca…

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‘The Hunting Ground’: Why the Campus Rape Epidemic…

Rape is like a football game, Annie,” a UNC administrator allegedly told a student filing a rape report years ago. “If you look.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/flavorwire.com.icoflavorwire.com/507587/the-hunting-ground-why-campus-rape…

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Fraternities Lobby Against Campus Rape Investigations – Bloomberg…

The political arm for fraternities and sororities, known as FratPAC, is lobbying Congress to make it harder for colleges to investigate rape allegations.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.bloomberg.com.icobloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-24/fraternities-lob…

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Two Documentaries Spotlight Campus Rape

Campusrape has been a huge issue in our country that’s finally getting attention, and many schools have completely mishandled their cases.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/act.mtv.com.icoact.mtv.com/posts/documentaries-campus-rape/

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Rape Myth Acceptance and Rape Attitudes in Campus Hook-Up Culture

REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE Rationale for the Chosen Literature 7 8 10 10 Rape Culture Rape Myths Feminist Theory Hook-up Culture Campus and Rape 10 11 12 15 21 Hooking Up, Rape

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/scholarworks.wmich.edu.icoscholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1051&context=…

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Politician Proposes Radical New Idea To Prevent Campus Rapes: ‘Hot…

Second Amendment opponents are in an uproar after Nevad
a Assemblywoman Michele Fiore proposed a radical new concept to help curb the rise in
rapes on college campuses.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.shtfplan.com.icoshtfplan.com/headline-news/politician-proposes-radical…

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Why the campus rape doc ‘The Hunting Ground’…

The movie makes the claim that rape is a problem for virtually all campuses, but chancellors and administrations would rather stick their heads in the sand and ignore the problem rather than taking real…

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/hellogiggles.com.icohellogiggles.com/campus-rape-hunting-ground/

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Rolling Stone’s ‘A Rape on Campus.’ Notes and comment…

“A Rape on Campus” did that, repeatedly. But the journalists involved didn’t realize what they were doing. Why not?

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/pressthink.org.icopressthink.org/2015/04/rolling-stones-a-rape-on-campus-n…

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Believing Victims Is the First Step to Stopping Rape – NYTimes.com

The popular myth that women lie about rape doesn’t just hurt the survivors we accuse of lying. Justice and Fairness in CampusRape Cases.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/www.nytimes.com.iconytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/12/12/justice-and-fair…

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As ‘Missoula’ Shines Spotlight on Campus Rape, Women Share How…

There’s been a fierce nationwide debate over this country’s campusrape crisis, as more victims come forward to share how they felt the justice system failed them.

https://icons.duckduckgo.com/ip2/abcnews.go.com.icoabcnews.go.com/US/missoula-shines-spotlight-campus-rape-…

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