A three-hour workshop aims to have participants leave feeling prepared to respond to a report of sexual violence.
A three-hour workshop aims to have participants leave feeling prepared to respond to a report of sexual violence.
Dusty Johnstone of the UWindsor sexual misconduct response and prevention office will lead a public discussion of the University’s policy Thursday.
Dusty Johnstone is the University of Windsor’s sexual misconduct response and prevention officer.
The Windsor International Film Festival presents the documentary “The Hunting Ground,” an expose about rape on American college campuses, Thursday.
The “Women in University of Windsor History” tour Tuesday encompassed stops at six campus sites.
A UWindsor initiative to engage students in actively reducing sexual assault promises to put the power of the campus community behind prevention.
Learning specialist in women’s and gender studies, Dusty Johnstone, discusses her dissertation research on women’s struggle to label rape experiences in the September issue of the Canadian fashion magazine, Flare.
The Curiosity Shop will be set up today at the CAW Student Centre from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Even though by the letter of the law they may have been sexually assaulted, an alarming number of women don’t label what happened to them as sexual assault or rape, according to Dusty Johnstone.
A post-doctoral teaching fellow in Women’s Studies, Dr. Johnstone recently defended her 250-page PhD dissertation, a qualitative study based on interviews of 10 women who technically had been sexually assaulted, but didn’t label their experiences as such.