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Nearly 5 percent of
University of Kentucky students were raped or were the victims of attempted
rape during the last school year, a new survey has found. The incidents were
vastly underreported and most of the attackers were fellow students.
The
university conducted a campus-wide poll during the spring semester, asking
students about unwanted sexual experiences during the 2014-2015 academic year.
The preliminary results found that 4.9 percent of the roughly 21,500 Kentucky
students who answered the question had been sexually assaulted during that
time.
Only
30 sexual assault cases were reported to either campus or Lexington police
officers during the last academic year, while 114 were reported to other
university agencies. The survey found that 1,053 sexual assaults occurred,
meaning only 13.7 percent of the incidents were reported.
RT US report continues:
Nearly
75 percent of the sexual assault victims said they were attacked by a fellow
student, while 3.1 percent were assaulted by a university employee, including
faculty, staff and resident and teaching assistants. Nearly two-thirds (62.5
percent) of the incidents occurred off-campus, while more than a quarter (27.3
percent) occurred in university housing.
The
survey is part of University of Kentucky President Eli Capilouto’s five-year
plan to assess student perceptions and experiences regarding violence or
harassment while attending, the school said in a statement. The 2014-2015
academic year was the first to be assessed under the initiative.
“This
robust survey instrument is the next step in answering important questions
about sexual assault, learning and asking more questions that help us improve,”
Capilouto said. "This is what we must do as we undertake our sacred trust
to care for the health and well-being of our students."
The
survey, called the Campus Attitudes Towards Safety (CATS), was conducted
by the UK Center for Research on Violence Against Women.
"This
survey and its information IS a next step in addressing violence and harassment
for University of Kentucky students," Diane Follingstad, director of the
center, said in the statement. She added that the information revealed by the
survey will help the university "make the kinds of changes and introduce
programs that will enhance students' safety."
In
its statement, the university said that its results were comparable to a 2007
Department of Justice survey, called the Campus Sexual Assault (CSA) Study.
However, the university’s comparison is misleading because of how it defines
the term sexual assault and because of the time frames of the studies.
According to the CATS brochure, sexual assault is “unwanted sexual experiences
(vaginal, oral, or anal sex),” including “individuals for whom someone
attempted to force them to have sex, but they were able to escape.”
This
definition is more restrictive than the CSA version, which established sexual
assault as including “a wide range of victimizations, including rape and other
types of unwanted sexual contact (e.g., sexual battery).”
The
CSA Study found that 13.7 percent of female students at two large, public
universities had been victims of sexual assault since starting college. Of
those, 3.4 percent were raped. UK’s CATS version does not appear to tabulate
the number of sexual assaults that cannot be described as rape or attempted
rape, and only looked at those incidents that occurred within the last year.
Regardless,
the results are far better than a 2014 University of Oregon study, which used
an online survey to discover that more than a third of female students on
the Eugene campus reported being sexually assaulted, and 10 percent of the
women surveyed had been raped during their collegiate careers.
Last
May, the US Department of Education announced it was investigating 55 US
colleges and universities in connection with allegations that they
mishandled or ignored sexual assault and sexual harassment complaints.
Jennifer
Freyd, a professor in Oregon’s Department of Psychology who conducted that
university’s study, is part of a White House effort to develop a nationwide
survey of sexual assaults on college campuses that will allow for “meaningful
comparisons.”
"If
you've got a survey that lets you make meaningful comparisons between colleges,
then colleges will have a meaningful incentive to reduce the violence that's
being measured," she told Reuters last May.
The Kentucky survey was
part of the registration process, while the Oregon version was emailed to a
group of 5,000 random students. University of Kentucky officials believe that
their school is among the first in the country to undertake a mandatory survey
about sexual assault on campus, they said.
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