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USA: Street Harassment on a College Campus, One Year Later

May 25, 2018 By Correspondent

Connie DiSanto, USA SSH Blog Correspondent

It was just over a year ago when I connected with Stop Street Harassment’s founder Holly Kearl over a controversial exhibit I created with a student here a UNH. I remember when I first ran the idea by a staff member who works at the exhibit location, his comment to me on the subject matter of street harassment, was “I thought that cat call stuff went out with the 80s?”

And during a residential hall program that our staff was offering to a group of students, the RA for the hall was informed that the program was going to be about street harassment and then replied, “Does that really happen here at UNH? I always thought it was just something in big cities.”

Those comments are more reasons why we still need to talk about street harassment, and specifically, we need to talk about it on college campuses. As part of last year’s exhibit, a survey was conducted by our student volunteers and it concluded that statistically speaking, what happens on this campus is very similar to what happens nationally with regard to street harassment.

As we end the final semester for the year we realize there is much more work to be done. We know that even our students struggle with identifying what street harassment is and what it looks like on their own campus. We’ve heard from many students who recall sexually harassing comments made to them at a very early age yet when applying it to situations that happen within their community they begin to expect it on a college campus as part of the college culture.

On April 11 we participated in a TweetChat about street harassment on college campuses led by our friends at the Women & Gender Studies Program at George Mason University and we talked about some key questions:

  • What is street harassment? How does it look like? How does it feel like?
  • How can we stop street harassment on campus?
  • What are some barriers in identifying or reporting street harassment?
  • What are some resources available to report street harassment?

You can look back to the conversation at #MasonAntiSH but I’d love to hear from you! You can email me with any answers to the above questions.

UNH student Jordyn Haime with UNH staff members Liz Fowler, Connie DiSanto and Megan Bresnahan

This year our exhibit for International Anti-Street Harassment week was in a new location at our campus library (since we were not allowed back to the more visible campus spot). One year later we are proud of the work we’ve been able to do and we look forward to continuing the conversation and bringing in new campus members as allies to help in the fight to end street harassment and all forms of sexual violence.

Connie is the Marketing Communications Specialist for the Sexual Harassment & Rape Prevention Program (SHARPP) at the University of New Hampshire. She can be reached at connie.disanto@unh.edu.

 

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, correspondents, street harassment Tagged With: college, UNH

Safety First: Street Harassment and Women’s Educational Choices in India

April 6, 2017 By Contributor

Guest Post for International Anti-Street Harassment Week

By Girija Borker

Why do women in India choose to attend lower ranked colleges?

Is it because women have lower high school test scores? No.

Is it because of street harassment? YES.

Women studying in Delhi University (DU), one of the top universities in India, choose lower ranked colleges than men with the same high school test scores. This is despite the fact that women score higher on national high school exams than men. And this is true even for the smartest and the most ambitious women. My research aims to understand why women are making these choices and whether it is because women trade-off quality of education for safety from harassment.

DU is composed of 77 colleges and the colleges are spread across Delhi. The colleges vary in quality, with each college having its own campus, staff and classes. Undergraduate admissions in DU are centralized and primarily based on students’ high school test scores. I surveyed over 4,000 students at DU to collect information on students’ daily travel route, travel mode, their high school scores and exposure to street harassment. At DU, most students live with their parents and travel to college every day, predominantly by public transport. In my sample, over 70% of students live at home and of these around 80% use public transport to travel to college every day. Most women I surveyed have experienced some form of street harassment – 63% of women have experienced unwanted staring, 50% have received inappropriate comments, 27% have been touched inappropriately and 25% have been followed.

To determine how the risk of harassment during travel affects college choice, I combine safety data with information on students’ chosen travel route and alternative travel routes available. Safety data comes from SafetiPin, a map-based mobile application that allows users to characterize the safety of an area. Information on harassment by travel mode comes from Safecity, a mobile application that lets women share their stories of harassment in urban public spaces. I used Google Maps to map the route options available to each student for their travel to college every day.

Harassment risk and students’ chosen travel routes to a college in Delhi University.
My analysis indicates that avoidance behavior in response to street harassment can largely explain women’s choices. I found that women are willing to attend a college that is 6 ranks lower for a route that is 1 standard deviation safer. This means that if a woman must choose to travel daily to the number 1 ranked college but face a high probability of harassment, or commute to the 6th ranked college that incurs on average 1 standard deviation less of harassment, she will choose the 6th ranked college. Compared to men, women are willing to give up 4 more ranks for an additional standard deviation of safety. Even among individuals who chose the best college in their set of available choices, women spend Rs. 15,500 ($250) more than men in annual travel costs to take safer, but more expensive travel routes to college. This amount is equivalent to 6% of the average per capita annual income in Delhi.

This is the first study to assess the effects of street harassment on women’s college choice. The study highlights the degree to which the threat of street harassment holds back promising young women, even at a prestigious university in a modern city. The findings speak to the long-term consequences of everyday harassment – perpetuating gender inequality in education. Policy makers must realize that affirmative action for women is not enough unless we transform public spaces into enabling environments that are accessible to all.

Girija is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Economics at Brown University. She works primarily in the areas of gender economics, economics of education, and development economics. Girija grew up in Delhi and did her undergraduate studies from St. Stephen’s College in Delhi University.
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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, Resources Tagged With: Brown University, choice, college, Delhi University, higher education, Hyderabad India, India, public transportation, SafetiPin, university

USA: Friends Don’t Ask Their Friends for “Rush Boobs”

October 23, 2015 By Correspondent

LB Klein, USA, Former SSH Blog Correspondent

Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) at University of California San Diego is blowing up my RSS feed right now for requiring pledges to solicit photos of women’s breasts with “Rush SAE” written on them. These SAE brothers didn’t invent this. Google “rush boobs” (or don’t, seriously don’t) and there are myriad search results. Total Frat Move refers to using women’s breasts as promotional objects as a “timeless tradition.” This story broke when UCSD student Rachel Friedman posted a chat conversation in which her SAE new member friend senior Spenser Cornett asked her to share topless photos of Ms. Friedman and her friends.


Rachel Friedman and the message she received. Image via Cosmo

More and more fraternity chapters are receiving sexual violence prevention education. A common strategy for engaging men in preventing sexual violence is to appeal to their relationships with women. We call upon men to think of their “mothers, sisters, and girlfriends” and to consider they wouldn’t want the important women in their lives to be harmed. However Mr. Cornett’s request, and I imagine others like it, is a friendly one. It is flanked by “lol funny story” and a laughing emoji. Sexism is often embedded within men’s relationships with women. Ms. Friedman and Mr. Cornett’s friendship illustrates a need to ask more of men in these relationships.

I genuinely believe that virtually all fraternity men don’t want their mothers, girlfriends, sisters, and women friends to be raped. That just isn’t enough anymore. Many of these young men would proudly pin on a white ribbon pledging they are against rape or host a 5K to benefit a local rape crisis center. That just isn’t enough anymore. We have raised enough awareness, and we need real action. In our educational efforts, we are indeed calling men to action. We ask young men to “stand up” and “fight back” with the same hypermasculine ideals that perpetuate violence. Because men are considered leaders, we ask them to lead, to make public displays about how intolerant of violence they are. That just isn’t enough anymore. Moving toward culture change will require these young men to question tradition and advocate for structural change. It will require them to listen to women. It will require them to do something revolutionary for men to do: follow. This change will mandate that they feel a little more uncomfortable to make women a little more comfortable.

I imagine that the SAE brothers who collected topless photos of their women friends were insulted when some folks tied their behavior to sexual violence. “This is harmless,” they might say. “Boys will be boys,” others might say. “She overreacted,” several have posted in the comments (Friendly reminder: don’t read the comments). Young men are faced with choices between working toward a gender equitable futures and holding tight to tradition that has favored them. Making the day-to-day choices to resist patriarchal tradition is hard, and we need to intentionally work with men to do it. We need to help them take these risks.

Otherwise, we are asking too little of men. If we are going to say that men should care about ending sexual violence because of their relationships, we need to demand they do better in these relationships. It isn’t enough to congratulate men for not committing sexual violence or to applaud them for saying they’re against rape. That is too easy. It does not foster the critical thinking and empathy needed to shut down “rush boobs” from the inside, as opposed to relying on women to call this behavior out when they are made to feel unsafe (though brava, Rachel Friedman). We need to balance ensuring our educational programs meet men where they are, while also nudging them forward.

Sexual violence is about power and control. To truly achieve culture change, we need to ask men to give up some power: not just rapists, all men. We can’t end violence while propping up the exact oppressive traditions and systems that perpetuate it. We can’t decry rape and laugh off objectification. I am willing to believe that institutions founded as boys’ clubs (like fraternities or indeed institutions of higher education) can evolve their traditions as we approach a more gender equitable futures. However, I do think that we need to call on these traditionally patriarchal institutions to prove it. We need to raise our standards for men as they become engaged in ending sexual violence. As fraternity men become more visible in the movement to end sexual violence, we need to hold them accountable. Men shouldn’t be able to have their feminist cookies, and eat their misogyny cake too.

I am indeed somebody’s daughter and wife. I am proud of the many men in my life I count as friends, and I take those relationships seriously. Because I love these men, I hold them to a higher standard than just not raping women. My bodily autonomy, my right to be subject and not object needs to be more important than my male friends’ egos. They need to treat me like a whole person of equal worth to them. They need to not only not participate in my objectification but to prevent others from doing so, to make that behavior so abhorrent that there is a social cost to those who engage in it. They need to give up some of their social power, as they are gaining it at my expense.

The hypothetical young man or men in SAE who could have spoken out against asking their friends for “rush boobs” would have taken a risk. While sexual violence is certainly far too common, sexism is far more ubiquitous. We need young men to make small changes in the spaces in which they are currently the most comfortable. Indeed, we will incrementally achieve culture change as men give up some of their space in the boardroom, the subway, and the university campus. We need to create a culture in which young men consider challenging their bros as less problematic than reducing their women friends to topless photos (“no face necessary, lol”).

Engaging men in their roles as “fathers, sons, husbands, and friends” can be a powerful way to initially activate men to create change, but we can’t stop there. That is just not enough anymore. To achieve culture change, we need men to be inconvenienced in the exact spaces they once felt the most secure, the ones in which they benefit the most from tradition.

LB is an Atlanta-based advocate and educator dedicated to ending gender-based violence, supporting survivors, and advancing social justice.  You can follow her on twitter @LB_Klein.

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Filed Under: correspondents, News stories Tagged With: activism, college, fraternities, masculinity

How To Deal With Street Harassment On Campus?

April 15, 2015 By BPurdy

I’ve been experiencing street harassment since the age of twelve, but when I started college it suddenly became something that happened to me several times a week – even though my college was nearly 75% female. I was harassed both on-campus and in neighboring residential areas. I was harassed walking to and from class, the library, friends apartments, downtown on a Friday night…while it became a “normal” thing that I learned to more or less deal with, it never stopped making me feel uncomfortable.

One incident stands out in particular. It was a warm night, still early in the fall semester of my senior year. It was 10pm on a Monday night, and I was walking back from an on-campus club meeting to my off-campus apartment.

“Hey! Hey you!”

I ignored the calls, assuming they weren’t for me. Though there were few people around, I was on a well-lit main path on campus where I had always felt safe.

“Girl with the ponytail!”

Ok, that was definitely meant for me. Someone was yelling at me. Someone I didn’t know. I started to walk a little faster.

“Hey! Girls shouldn’t be walking out here alone. Where are you going? Let me walk you to your apartment. Where you live? I could walk you right up to your door, you know.”

He was following me. I was walking straight back to my empty apartment, and this stranger was following me. My thoughts started racing, and I pulled out my cell phone.

“Why you grabbing your phone?” my harasser yelled, now angry. “Who you calling? Girl, this is a private party!”

My heart immediately started pounding, my vision went blurry with fear. I made a split-second decision to run into the nearest academic building, where I hide in furthest stall of the women’s bathroom, feet up on the toilet seat, praying he wouldn’t follow me in.

I called my boyfriend. Luckily he was nearby and able to run over and get me. I went back to his apartment rather than mine, and once my hands and voice stopped shaking I decided to call campus police.

“I’m fine now,” I told the dispatcher when she picked up, giving the best description of the event that I could. “But I wanted to let you know that a strange man just tried to follow me back from my apartment, and I’m worried he might do the same thing to someone else tonight.”

“Well, you should have called while it was happening,” she replied curtly. “There’s nothing we can do now.”

I thanked her, for some reason, and numbly hung up, feeling a dull anger inside of me. Call while it was happening? I tried. It had only made the situation worse.

While the police dispatcher’s reply made sense, logically, it also displayed a basic misunderstanding of how to deal with victims of sexual harassment. I had been followed and threatened. I had been forced to hide in a bathroom out of fear. And when, out of concern for my fellow classmates, I reported it to the police, I was basically scolded for not acting sooner. I felt like I had done something wrong, rather than having been wronged. And for the rest of the year I refused to walk back from nighttime club meetings without my boyfriend accompanying me.

Colleges, we need a little help here. What do we, as students, do when we are threatened on campus? When our activities and movements are restricted due to gender-based harassment? When we begin to fear walking on our own campuses? When we are made to feel ashamed for having been harassed in the first place?

College is a time when we learn to embrace our own mobility and freedom. Harassment and the threat of sexual assault more than puts a damper on that, but there doesn’t seem to be much we can do. So colleges, I’m imploring you: help us learn what to report and how to report. Show us you’ll listen, and show us you’ll care. Remember back to the time when you were first learning to be free, yet constantly being told by society to be scared, and choose compassion rather than curtness. Teach us to be safe; but more importantly, teach us all not to put others in danger.

Britnae Purdy, Anti-Street Harassment Week Online Manager

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, Stories Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, college, EndSH, police, reporting, SAAM, stalking, universities

“I yelled that he just groped me. I literally started punching him in the head”

November 4, 2011 By HKearl

Via NY Post -- Shyane DeJesus

22-year old college student Shyane DeJesus attacked, berated, and snapped a cell phone picture of a man who groped her on a subway platform in New York City.

From the New York Post:

“DeJesus, who lives in Queens, was headed to work at a shoe store at 9:50 a.m. Oct. 23 when the drama unfolded as she stood on the platform and leaned over the tracks to see if a train was coming.

That’s when she noticed a man sneaking up alongside her.

Before DeJesus could step away, the deviant began rubbing against her thigh.

“It was disgusting,” she said. “I felt so violated.”

When the downtown No. 6 train arrived, the man “grabbed my right shoulder and pushed my head down and lifted my skirt up and groped me,” DeJesus said.

Via NYPost -- Report this man if you see him!

She began fighting back, and the cowardly creep ran onto the train.

“He went on the train and sat down as if nothing happened. I was hysterical. I yelled that he just groped me. I literally started punching him in the head,” she said.

No one came to her aid.

DeJesus got in a few more knocks on her attacker, and, as the train pulled in to the next station, took her phone out of her bag.

“I held the door and positioned the phone in his face. I was shaking, I’m surprised I got it,” she said.

“He smirked when I looked at him. He never said a word, not a word. All I got was that smirk.”

DeJesus then got off the train and ran to her job, where she called police.

Cops are still searching for the man.”

While I don’t condone violence, I sympathize with her actions. When man after man gets away with sexually harassing, stalking, groping, and assaulting women on the streets, subway platforms, buses, and stores of our country, and when bystanders stand by and let it happen, there comes a breaking point. Maybe after getting kicked and yelled at by a person he thought he could easily grope, this perpetrator won’t be so quick to grope someone else. Especially if the police catch him. Good for DeJesus.

DeJesus is not the only New York City woman to have this type of reaction to groping. In the past year, we’ve heard from Nicola Briggs who was videotaped yelling down the man who rubbed against her and flashed her on the subway (he was later arrested and deported), Kate Spencer who hit the man who groped her on a subway platform, and Robyn Shepherd who chased down a man who smacked her butt as she walked down the street.

Street harassers, beware: more and more women are fighting back and not just figuratively and not just online, but actually, physically fighting back. So stop harassing us. We don’t like it, no one does. If you continue to harass us, you may just find out how much we don’t like it when you get a slap to the face or a kick to the groin. I don’t like violence, I don’t like harassment. Stop the harassment, there will be no violence.

And bystanders: do something if you see another person facing harassment! Ask them if they’re okay if you’re not sure if they’re being harassed or not. Just do something! Standing idly by is not acceptable.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: college, fighting back, groping, Kate Spencer, New York City, Nicola Briggs, Robyn Shepherd, Shyane DeJesus, street harassment

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