色界吧

Student doing chalk drawings related to Project SAFE on campus

Project SAFE is dedicated to ending sexual violence on 色界吧鈥檚 campus through a series of frameworks informed by the public health model of prevention. Through these frameworks, we are able to provide comprehensive prevention education as well as advocacy and healing programs that center safety and autonomy. Combined these components allow us to address primary, secondary, and tertiary levels of prevention providing a comprehensive approach in service of our mission.

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Project SAFE staff, which includes our Director and Survivor Advocate, Intake and Programs Coordinator, Prevention Education Coordinator, and Peer Advocates (PAs), provide various training and programs throughout the academic year. Peer Advocates present training to 色界吧 Athletics teams, Greek Organizations and other student groups. Project SAFE also organizes campus-wide programs that educate the community about sexual and interpersonal violence and provide opportunities for healing from trauma. Empowerment Week, held annually in October, is dedicated to preventing and healing from dating and interpersonal violence. Take Back the Week, held annually in April, explores intersectionality and sexual violence to raise awareness that sexual violence affects everyone, regardless of gender, race or orientation.

The Social-Ecological Model

 

The Social-Ecological Model considers the complex interplay between individual, relationship, community, and societal factors. It allows us to understand the range of factors that put people at risk for violence as well as factors that protect people from experiencing or perpetrating violence. The overlapping rings in the model illustrate how factors at one level influence factors at another level. 

Individual 

The first level identifies personal and historical factors that increase the likelihood of becoming a victim and/or perpetrator of violence. Some of these factors may be assigned sex, gender, age, education, income, substance use, or history of abuse.

Prevention strategies at this level look like promoting attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors that prevent violence. Specific approaches may include early consent education, social-emotional learning, and safe dating and healthy relationship skill programs.

Relationship

The second level examines close relationships that may increase the risk of experiencing violence as a victim or perpetrator. A person鈥檚 closest social circle-peers, partners, and family members influence their behavior and contribute to their experience.

Prevention strategies at this level may include mentoring and peer programs designed to strengthen communication, promote positive peer norms, accountability, problem-solving skills and healthy relationships.

Community

The third level explores the settings, such as schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods, in which social relationships occur and seeks to identify the characteristics of these settings that are associated with becoming victims or perpetrators of violence.

Prevention strategies at this level focus on improving the physical and social environment in these settings (e.g., by creating safe places where people live, learn, work, and play) and by addressing other conditions that give rise to violence in communities.

Society

The fourth level looks at the broad societal factors that help create a climate in which violence is encouraged or inhibited. These factors include social and cultural norms that support violence as an acceptable way to resolve conflicts. Other large societal factors include the health, economic, educational, and social policies that help to maintain economic or social inequalities between groups in society.

Prevention strategies at this level include efforts to promote societal norms that protect against violence as well as efforts to strengthen household financial security, education and employment opportunities, and other policies that affect the structural determinants of health.

Forms of Prevention

Primary Prevention: Education

Primary forms of prevention aims to prevent sexual violence from occurring in the first place. That can look like:

- Continuously learning about healthy communication and consent

- Practicing setting boundaries for one's self and in all relationships - friendships, family, lovers, partners, roommates, co-workers, teammates, etc.

- Bystander Intervention

- Building a support system and network

- Addressing and breaking down cultural norms of violence, and creating equitable ways of interacting with individuals and communities

- Redistributing power and resources at the individual, interpersonal, and institutional level

 

At Project SAFE, we provide primary prevention educational programs, workshops, and training such as:

- First Year Orientation

- How To Support Survivors & Trauma-Informed Care

- Practice Consent and Boundaries

- How to Be an Upstander 

- Creating Survivor Centered Spaces

- Consent-Based Workshops

- Healthy Relationships

- Student Athlete and Greek Life Training

- Faculty and Staff Training

- Highlighting Interpersonal Violence (IPV) Month in October with Empowerment Week

- Highlighting Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM) in April with Take Back the Week

Secondary Prevention: Advocacy

Secondary forms of prevention provides immediate response after violence has occurred. The Project SAFE office provides advocacy services for those who have experienced violence, such as but not limited to:

- Crisis intervention and emotional support

- Resources and referrals for counseling, medical, legal, and other resources as needed

- Developing a safety plan

- Addressing housing, academic, and employment concerns

- Mapping and reaching out to support network

- Navigating the criminal justice system, Title IX, and/or the Student Conduct process

- Accompaniment to Title IX, Student Conduct meetings, hearings, medical centers, and/or police

- Healing and Empowerment

Tertiary Prevention: Trauma-Informed Healing

Tertiary forms of prevention provide long-term support for survivors and address the lasting effects of trauma. This includes:

- Trauma-informed healing and support

- Mindfulness and meditation

- Sustaining a support system

- Joining a network of survivor support and accessing resources over time

- Listening to and being in solidarity with survivors

- Changing practices of justice and accountability that consider a survivor's needs over time

Prevention Education Resources

Sexual Violence Prevention: Beginning the Dialogue (CDC, 2004)

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Our Prevention Education Coordinator is dedicated to developing meaningful, topical, and culturally humble education programs for all stakeholders at 色界吧. This includes state and federally mandated training, such as that given to first year students and Greek Life, as well as NCAA-mandated training for athletes.

Project SAFE offers an array of workshops and trainings to provide a comprehensive prevention approach to sexual and interpersonal violence for the Occidental community. Below is a list of workshops/topics we offer, but it is not limited to: 

- Introduction to Project SAFE Office and Resources (30 min)

- How to Support Survivors and Trauma-Informed Care (60 min)

- Practice Consent and Boundaries (60 min)

- Being an 色界吧 Upstander (60 min)

- Recognizing the Red Flags: A Workshop on Healthy and Unhealthy Relationships (60 min)

Project SAFE is happy to create custom workshops and presentations for your student group or department. If you would like to request a workshop or training, please schedule a consultation below. We typically prefer 1-2 weeks' notice, or more, for workshop requests, however, we will do our best to accommodate your needs and schedule. If you have any additional questions, please feel free to email projectsafe@oxy.edu

Contact Project SAFE
Stewart-Cleland Hall Lower Lounge

Monday-Thursday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday-Sunday: 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.

OXY 24/7 Confidential Hotline:
(323) 341-4141