Apply for SAFER’s Board of Directors Today!

Students Active for Ending Rape (SAFER) is devoted to empowering college students to change how their schools prevent and respond to sexual violence by providing them with resources to help build successful grassroots sexual assault policy reform campaigns. SAFER trains students in effective organizing tactics and encourage them to examine the overlapping links between sexual assault and all forms of individual and institutional violence. Our goal is to ensure that every college puts in place prevention programs, crisis services, disciplinary procedures, and community outreach programs that challenge the oppressions that ultimately cause sexual violence.

SAFER is operated and governed by a diverse Board of Directors. The Board of Directors works as a volunteer collective, determining the policies and overall strategy of this nationally recognized nonprofit, largely operating by consensus. This intimate connection to the work and the field provides each member of the Board with an opportunity to actively create social change while gaining professional nonprofit management experience in a non-hierarchical setting. Our approach to running the organization provides a platform to strengthen one’s personal and professional skills while connecting to a greater network of like-minded advocates and activists.

Our volunteer board members work hard to contribute to the organization’s mission, but we also understand that as volunteers, our board members have other commitments in their lives. Ideally, we hope that board members will contribute in many of the following areas:

  • Communications
  • Fundraising
  • Evaluations
  • Trainings
  • Student Outreach
  • Policy Database

Skills & Qualifications

  • Highly collaborative style but also comfortable working largely independently, with minimal supervision. As a volunteer position, it is important to know how to maintain and manage one’s workload.
  • Strong attention to detail and accuracy, the ability to prioritize and organize multiple projects, meet deadlines, problem-solve and multi-task
  • Experience fundraising for nonprofits
  • Sincere commitment to the social justice movement
  • A background with student activism is a plus

Meetings and commitment:

Minimum of one year, with an average commitment of three to five hours per week. Board members must reside in the New York Metro Area and are responsible for raising $500 per year. SAFER holds monthly board meetings, which are currently scheduled for the second Tuesday of the month, 7:00p.m – 9:00p.m at SAFER’s downtown Manhattan office. (Dates are subject to change)

Board members are active participants in the organization’s overall planning and fundraising efforts and communicate frequently via email.

Interested applicants should send a cover letter and resume to davinia@safercampus.org. SAFER is committed to maintaining a diverse organization and we will actively recruit people of color, people with disabilities, and people with diverse gender and sexual identities.

 

Futures Without Violence Seeks Boston-Based Students for Campus Violence Advisory Board

Futures Without Violence is looking for current students in the Boston area to serve on their student advisory board for campus violence programs. Reach out to contact@safercampus.org if you or someone you know might be interested!

Most everyone is familiar with the phrase “freshman 15,” which traditionally describes the extra 15 pounds that college students gain in their first year of college. In light of the fact that the first semester, or 15 weeks, is the most dangerous for female freshmen, with increased incidents of rape and sexual assault on U.S. college campuses, we are repositioning the phrase for a public campaign. (Kimble, 2008).

Our “Safe On Campus” campaign will continue to build momentum during the seven months of the school year that follow – with calls for policy change, strategies for prevention and intervention on U.S. campuses, and targeted media outreach to raise visibility of this issue. The primary objective is to increase the number of Schools that are willing to create comprehensive prevention and response policies as outlined in Beyond Title IX: Guidelines for Preventing and Responding to Gender-based violence in Higher Education.

The campaign will contain five elements: A Boston based “Freshman 15” Summit to encourage student activism and engagement, a national student award program, a parent survey, material development, and communications focusing on outreach to college administrators and the media. Descriptions of each element are included below.

Student Activism and Engagement

The campaign will launch with a day-long summit focusing on the increased risk of sexual assault during the first 15 weeks of freshman year. Fifteen student leaders from multiple universities will be recruited to plan and organize the summit in Boston for September 2012 for 250 attendees. The Freshman 15 Summit will attract media attention through an agenda that includes performances, workshops, leadership plenary session, social media objectives, and national award program announcement by celebrity appearance. The award program will incentivize students to organize on their college campuses and engage their presidents in the solutions to gender based violence.

Parents as Influencers

Hart Research and Associates will develop a national survey for parents of high school aged college bound students (juniors and seniors) and college freshman and sophomores asking question about their beliefs and knowledge about sexual and physical violence on campus and what they are willing to do about it. The data will be released prior to Boston Summit and used to inform creative concepts and tools for parents as well as provide the foundation for a PR outreach campaign.

Material Development/Communications

Futures Without Violence will create a series of tools that includes distilling policy guidelines to “Top 15”, creating a “Top 15 things To Pack When You Go off to College” worksheet and a series of adaptable roommate/friend/team/fraternity agreements. We will also partner with LipmanHearne PR for to create communications materials and to conduct outreach to national media and function as a liaison with college administrators. All of these materials and efforts will tie into a social media campaign to advance prevention of sexual assault and promote the guidelines.

The results of the twelve month campaign will be: 1). Increased implementation of the guidelines on college campuses throughout the country 2). Increased awareness of solutions to gender based violence and increased interventions during first 15 weeks of school, particularly for freshman women. 3). Increased numbers of presidents as spokespeople and 4). More parents talking to their teens and schools as they head off to college.

NYC Event: “The Guy’s Guide to Feminism”

For everyone in New York City, there is a great event happening tomorrow. Join Michael Kimmel and Quentin Walcott for a discussion about men and feminism (and why men should care about feminism!). Here are the details:

Wednesday, June 6th
7:00-9:30 PM
The Feminist District
151 W. 46th St. (between 6th & 7th Ave) 8th Floor, NYC 10036
(elevator access for the differently abled)
Subway: N,R,Q to 49th St. or B,D,F,M to Rockefeller Center

Cost: $12 pre-paid, $15 at door
Limited Seating / Buy Online!
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/e/247090
BUY THE BOOK:
http://bluestockings.com/
http://guysguidetofeminism.com/order-now

Change Happened at BU: A Student Activist’s Story

Just weeks ago, Boston University announced the establishment of a sexual assault crisis and prevention center, which is set to open its doors at the beginning of the 2012 school year. Of course, there are some amazing student activists behind this success story. Without further ado, I’d like to introduce Sarah Merriman, whose guest post below chronicles her and her fellow students’ struggle to make change happen at BU. You can also read the proposal they submitted to their school’s administrators by clicking here. Congratulations to Sarah and all of the student activists at BU for this incredible achievement! 

February 20th, 2012. That was the Tuesday morning that dawned bright and cold, the Monday morning in which my life, my experience as a BU student, and my activism, was about to change forever.

My activism, as a student, a researcher, and a feminist operating in Boston and out of BU’s Center for Gender, Sexuality, and Activism (CGSA) has always centered around issues of interpersonal violence, and almost always focused on sexual assault. For years, it has felt like I have been banging my head against a wall of bureaucracy and budget issues to get an ounce of sexual assault prevention to my fellow students at BU. Other students like me had gone in these same circles. Nothing was happening.

On this Tuesday morning, though, we caught word that a hockey player had assaulted another student over the long weekend, the second in a line of hockey player-perpetuated attacks. Suddenly, this was the incident that launched a thousand students, so to speak. People were confused, angry, shocked, mobilized, and they were looking to the CGSA for guidance. We were the only people on campus consistently working on feminist issues such as sexual assault, and the student body needed us.

After an exhausting few weeks of press, town halls, being attacked on the internet, a task force being formed, and a lot of stressful meetings, a few of us, students both within and outside the CGSA, decided it was time to write a proposal for what we were calling a “rape crisis center.” No student initiative comes to fruition at BU without a written proposal and a strong case, and even then, we knew this was a long shot. But we had to try.

Over many meetings (that went from 9 pm to 2 or 3 in the morning), plus countless hours of outside research that included looking at other universities’ policies and prevention and treatment measures, taking meetings with many experienced university professionals, gathering over 1,000 signatures of support on an online petition, and, in many ways, redefining the dialogue happening across campus about rape culture, we formed a document. It was an exhaustive 20 pages. No stone was left unturned. We attached letters of support from community leaders, and we had our consultants approve the whole thing before turning it in.

I had expected a delay well into the summer. A five-year plan floated in my head. What I never expected, on April 30th, 2012, another bright beginning to my week, was the letter that read that a center would be opening in the Fall of 2012. This year. In a few months. It was happening. It would include bystander intervention training, multiple crisis counselors, and a prevention specialist. I cried as I realized the one thing I had fought for for my the entirety of my undergraduate career was being realized.

Never have I felt like more of a warrior than I did this past year. I was fighting within my school, my community, for its betterment. Famous feminists and national leaders were using my words to send their support for this space and this mission. The paragraphs of prevention suggestions that I wrote will be used in reality. I can’t emphasize enough that the “student voice” is not a worthless one. I was hitting a wall for years before incidental timing and a community ready for change, plus an incredible group of seven students from different backgrounds and experiences, made this proposal happen. That’s student power. That’s why we do what we do, everyday.

Queerocracy Presents QRASH: Queers Resisting All Street Harassment

Here’s a great opportunity for folks living in New York City. Queerocracy has organized a training focused on resisting street harassment that will take place on June 2, 2012, from 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm. It’s free and open to everyone. Check out the details below if you’re interested. To register for this event, click here.

JUNE 2, 2012 | 1-5 PM

THE LGBT CENTER

208 West 13th Street (between 7th & 8th Ave)
Room 301

Join QUEEROCRACY at this training to resist street harassment of all forms! The event is free of cost and open to everyone.

Reclaiming our power and our voices that can feel lost and silenced when faced with public harassment.

Uncovering the causes of street harassment.

Learning to be effective witnesses and confident survivors of public harassment.

Speaking out & telling our stories.

1:00: check in, visit tables of partnering organizations
1:30: introduction, background & causation of street harassment
2:30: strategies for survivors of street harassment
3:30: strategies for witnesses of street harassment
4:15: speak out & story sharing

If your organization is interested in presenting or tabling at this event, please contact: Megan Mulholland at megan@queerocracy.org.

If transportation fees would prevent you from attending, please let Alli Lindner know at lindner.ap@gmail.com.

Help New Yorkers for Safe Transit Reach Their Goal!

A few weeks ago, SAFER posted about a survey that is currently being conducted by New Yorkers for Safe Transit. This great organization is trying to get a sense of the types of violence and harassment that are actually occurring in our communities. Their goal is to reach 2,000 surveys by June 15, and they need your help! If you use New York City public transportation and you haven’t already taken this survey, please check it out and share it with your friends!

Take Back the Bar 2012: A SAFER Fundraiser!

Come close out Sexual Assault ACTIVISM Month with SAFER! We’re celebrating a busy month of movement-building in NYC and want you to celebrate with us at Marshall Stack (66 Rivington St.) on Tuesday, May 1, 2012, from 6:00 to 8:00 pm!

For a $10 donation, your first drink is on us. The bar’s regular happy hour runs until 7:00 pm.

All donations go directly to helping us train student activists in how to hold their schools accountable for preventing and responding to sexual violence. Help us reach more students before this semester wraps up!

And, of course, you know we want to hang out and see your lovely faces! COME TAKE BACK THE BAR WITH US!

Help New Yorkers for Safe Transit Fight Sexual Harassment

Cross-posted from SAFER’s Tumblr. 

New Yorkers for Safe Transit (NYFST), a coalition of organizations and advocates that work toward eliminating harassment and assaults on NYC public transport, has just launched a large-scale survey, online and in-person, on the types of violence and harassment that are really taking place in our communities. NYFST will summarize the findings to share with the public.

Please take a minute to take this quick survey about harassment and assault on the NYC public transportation system by visiting their website: www.nyfst.org/survey (NOTE: We’re having some technical difficulties today, so I’m unable to create a link for the survey. Copy and paste the link to visit the survey website.)

Below is an overview of the survey:

This survey asks questions about harassment and violence. If any of the questions in the survey make you uncomfortable, or you don’t know the answer, you can choose not to respond or choose to stop the survey at any time.

Your information will be used to make a broad analysis about harassment and violence in the public transportation system. We will summarize the responses and may choose to present a summary of our findings publicly.

We would love to stay in touch to tell you about the results of the survey! So please give us your information on the final page if you choose to. Your contact information will be separated from your survey responses. However, we think it’s important for people to tell their stories publicly in order to raise awareness about this issue. If you are interested in sharing your story email us at info@nyfst.org.

PLEASE ONLY COMPLETE THE SURVEY ONCE!

The data will not be taken seriously if we have duplicate responses!

For more information about this survey, and how the information collected will be used, please contact us at info@nyfst.org.

Visit us at http://nyfst.org or follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

LAST CALL for Applications: Apply NOW for FlipIt!

***LAST CALL FOR APPLICATIONS!***

Are you an undergraduate student currently residing in or around New York City? SAFER has teamed up with NOW-NYC and A Long Walk Home for FlipIt: Students Organizing Against Violence, a free, one-day student summit and interactive workshop focused on campus organizing, policy reform, and using art for social change. Students of color, students with disabilities, LGBTQQI students, and men are encouraged to apply. I’ve included a brief summary of the day’s activities below, but you can head over to the conference’s Facebook page to learn more.

• Receive in-depth training on sexual assault and campus policy with anti-violence and advocacy experts
• Build a new school peer-group that will work together to make change on your campus
• Connect with local organizations and leaders in activism
• Become part of a new city-wide network of students and student leaders working to stop sexual assault

The event will be held at Pace University on April 14, 2012, but the application deadline is right around the corner. Make sure to apply by the end of the month! (And watch NOW-NYC’s awesome promo video below!)