Preventing Sexual Assault and Exploitation, Relationship Abuse, Stalking & Harassment

To request a presentation or workshop for your class or student organization, please email us at glc@elon.edu or fill out our request form through PhoenixCONNECT.

Contributing to a campus culture that does not tolerate and actively prevents violence is the responsibility of us all! The Gender & LGBTQIA Center collaborates closely with campus and community partners to create messaging and programming towards the prevention of gender-based violence, including sexual and relationship violence, gender-based bias and harassment, and stalking. These prevention efforts include:

  • Sexual Assault Prevention (Vector) online education program required for all new students
  • New Student Orientation program with small-group discussion facilitated by Orientation Leaders
  • Required training for many student leaders groups including Residence Life, Orientation staff, fraternity and sorority communities, Elon 1010 peer mentors and many others on bystander intervention skills, best practices for consent, supporting survivors and campus resources for support, advocacy and reporting
  • Workshops by professional staff and peer educators for faculty, staff and student cohorts

Get Involved!

Programs & Workshops

The Gender & LGBTQIA Center provides programs and workshops year-round for faculty/staff departments, student organizations, classes, athletic teams, Greek organizations, residence hall floors and various other student cohorts on topics such as Title IX, healthy relationships, consent, bystander intervention, supporting survivors, gender roles, pop culture and challenging rape culture. To find out more or schedule a program, please reach out to the Gender & LGBTQIA Center at glc@elon.edu. All requests must be submitted at least 10 days ahead of the requested time.

Events & Collaborations

To learn more about our events, please visit the Gender & LGBTQIA Center’s calendar of events or check us out on PhoenixCONNECT. If you have an idea for an event or collaborative program, reach out to us! Here are some annual events and campaigns to look out for:

  • Supporting Survivors Week events each semester, including the CARE-nival
  • Domestic Violence Awareness Month events during October (These Hands Don’t Hurt, Couples Chemistry, etc.)
  • Sexual Assault Awareness Month events during April (including Denim Day)

Student Programs & Organizations

  • The Coalition for Learning, Empowerment & Anti-Violence Resources (CLEAR): CLEAR is a student-led program through the Gender & LGBTQIA Center that focuses on prevention education, community-building, and building awareness and knowledge of campus resources for survivors of sexual assault, relationship abuse and stalking.
  • Elon Feminists For Equality, Change, and Transformation (EFFECT): Elon Feminists is an organization that is devoted to awareness and activism around issues of feminism in an intersectional way.
  • Alpha Chi Omega: This is a national women’s organization that enriches the lives of members through lifetime opportunities for friendship, leadership, learning, and service. Their philanthropy is domestic violence and they do substantial service work with Family Abuse Services of Alamance County.
  • Students Promoting Awareness, Responsibility, Knowledge, and Success (SPARKS): This organization is a group of authentic and accepting peer educators, leaders and advocates who have a variety of passions and interests related to health, wellness and social justice. SPARKS educates the campus community on inclusive sex education.

There are some of many positions, offices and community organizations that engage in violence prevention and response:

  • Confidential Support & Advocacy Services: The Assistant Director of the GLC for Confidential Support & Advocacy Services, AK Krauss, manages and provides confidential resources through the advocacy phone line, Safeline (336.278.3333), available 24-hours a day, seven days a week, year-round.
  • Title IX Office: Title IX coordinates university referrals and response to sexual harassment, interpersonal violence, sexual misconduct, and sex and/or gender based discrimination. You can report by going to the Title IX website.
  • Gender & LGBTQIA Center: Staff in the GLC coordinates campus prevention efforts with a myraid of staff, faculty, students and community members. For more information, please contact Becca Bishopric Patterson.
  • Sexual Assault and Gender Issues Council (SAGIC): SAGIC has provided guidance and support to the various university offices dedicated to preventing and responding to sexual assault and relationship violence, as well as promoting gender equality. This presidentially-appointed advisory council is comprised of faculty, staff, and students. For more information, please contact SAGIC Co-chair Ann Cahill.
  • Community Prevention and Capacity-building Team: Community PACT is an open community response and prevention team that assists with carrying out the goals and activities of the Office on Violence Against Women Campus Grant. Anyone interested in joining can contact Becca at bbishopric@elon.edu.
  • CrossRoads Sexual Assault Response & Resource Center: CrossRoads serves child and adult victims of sexual assault and trauma through confidential counseling, advocacy, child medical treatment, education, and community awareness. To learn more, visit their website.
  • Family Abuse Services of Alamance County: Family Abuse Services provides services and support to survivors of intimate partner violence and their children. To learn more, visit their website.

Evidenced-Based Approach to Prevention Work

Ending Violence through Culture Change

At Elon, we recognize that it takes the stakeholders working in many aspects of the campus and community to end violence on campus. We use evidence-based and informed approaches to ending violence on campus that promote protective and reduce risk factors of victimization and perpetration and employ strategies including awareness, education and skill building at all levels of the socio-ecological model (individual, interpersonal, community, policy).

Levels of Prevention

  • Primary Prevention: Focusing on protective factors to prevent a first time instance of violence
  • Secondary Prevention: Reducing the risk of perpetration
  • Tertiary Prevention: Deploying intervention strategies such as support and resources for supporting survivors of violence and holding perpetrators accountable

Core Content Areas

When individuals choose to commit violence against women, sexual violence, relationship violence, harassment or stalking, they are doing so to exert power and control over another person. These acts of bias, harassment and violence are committed within the context of a culture that promotes and tolerates violence, specifically towards girls, women and individuals with historically maraginalized identities. In order to prevent violence on our campuses, we must not only hold perpetrators accountable, but work to change the culture to one that is intolerant of violence. Below are some of the core content areas that we focus on in our programming.

Supporting Survivors

Paramount to ending gender violence is creating spaces and communities in which survivors feel supported in disclosing, seeking help and advocacy, pursuing processes and defining their own experiences. This type of education can include everything from promoting consistent and visible messaging of campus and community resources for survivors to teaching student leaders (orientation leaders, resident assistants) how to properly respond to disclosures.

Active Bystander Programming

Learning how to step in or speak out during a potentially difficult or dangerous situations can be uncomfortable and doing it tactfully and safely takes training and practice. Bystander intervention programs increases student understanding of the realities of violence on campus and the intersections of oppression, addresses factors contributing to bystander inaction, increases motivation and ownership over preventing campus violence and communicates strategies for challenging aspects of rape culture and intervening in situations of potential or actual sexual violence, relationship violence and stalking.

Social Change & Challenging Rape Culture

To end gender-based violence, campus and community members must learn to interrupt and challenging cultural norms and expectations that promote bias or violence. Some examples of this include dispelling myths about gender-based violence, encouraging media literacy and critical dialogue on the representation of gender in the media (including pornography), reducing victim blaming, promoting gender equity and equality, challenging the gender/sexuality binaries and encouraging inclusion and celebration of all identities, and addressing other forms of oppression.

Engaging Men to Prevent Violence – Healthy Masculinity Work

All genders and identities are essential to ending interpersonal violence and the epidemic of violence against women. Many faculty, staff and students are engaged in programs and services that seek to engage men in emotional development, promote healthy relationships and gender equity, and support authentic gender expression. To get connected to these efforts, please email Dr. Andrew Monteith at amonteith@elon.edu.

Here are national organizations and resources on engaging men to end gender-based violence:

Consent & Healthy Relationships Education

General sex, consent and relationship education is a component of primary prevention housed within health education efforts. By improving the ability for students to talk about positive sexual and relationship experiences, students begin to understand consent beyond a transaction, but as an ongoing mutually empowering process.

Evidence-Base Self Defense

In our culture and many others, individuals who identify as or were socialized as women are told that fighting or exerting physical strength is not acceptable. While we know that self-defense is not a primary prevention technique or the only solution to ending violence against women, we believe that engaging your inner and physical strength and practicing the act of protecting yourself can be a powerful way for anyone to combat violence and gain confidence. It is important to keep in mind that the majority of survivors know the offender, which makes it even more difficult for them to assert and defend verbal and physical boundaries. For more information about the requirements for us to partner with a self-defense program, email us at glc@elon.edu.

There is only one known evidence-based self-defense program:

Visit some of these organizations to learn more!