Download - COVA 09 SVP 10.19.09 97-03

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    COVA ConferenceOctober 20, 2009Laney Gibbes, MartiKovener, & Catherine

    Guerrero

    Sexual Violence Preventionin

    your Community

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    Lets Talk Prevention

    Primary Prevention: any action, strategy or policy that preventssexual violence from initially occurring.

    Secondary Prevention: Immediate responses after violence has

    occurred to deal with the consequences in the short-term.

    Tertiary Prevention: Long-term responses after violence hasoccurred to deal with the lasting consequences of violence.

    *Definitions from Center for Disease Control

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    Individual Influences: Biology,temperament, attitudes and beliefs;exposure to violence.

    Interpersonal influences: peers,intimate partners, and familymembers.

    Environmental influences designedto impact the climate, systems, andpolicies.

    Multi-partner collaborations to changelaws & social norms that support sexualviolence.

    SOCIETAL

    COMMUNITY/ORGANIZATION

    RELATIONSHIP

    INDIVIDUAL

    Primary Prevention:Whats the Focus

    VERA Institute of Justice

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    How: Whats the Process

    VERA Institute of Justice

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    Identify Risk andProtective Factors

    Review your local program data

    Review your law enforcement statistics

    Review community demographics and context

    Talk to your schools, health departments, socialservice departments, and other human serviceorganizations

    Ensure you are gathering information from

    diverse sources

    Define the Problem

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    Identify Risk andProtective Factors

    Risk Factors associated with a greaterlikelihood of sexual violence perpetration:contributing factors may or may not be directcauses. Not everyone who is identified as "at risk"becomes a perpetrator of violence.*

    Protective Factors may lessen the likelihoodof sexual violence victimization or perpetration bybuffering against risk: can exist at individual,relational, community, and societal levels.*

    *http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/dvp/SV/svp-

    Risk and Protective Factors

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    Sexual Violence RiskFactors

    http://www.cdc.gov/Ncipc/dvp/SV/svp-risk_protective.htm

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    Nine Principles ofEffective Prevention Programs

    Comprehensive

    Varied Teaching Methods

    Sufficient Dosage

    Theory Driven

    Positive Relationships Appropriately Timed

    Socio-Culturally Relevant

    Outcome Evaluation

    Well-Trained Staff

    Nation, M., Crusto, C., Wandersman, A., Kumpfer, K. L., Seybolt, D., Morrissey-Kane, E., &Davino, K. (2003). What worksinprevention: Principlesof EffectivePrevention

    Programs. AmericanPsychologist , 58, 449-456.Retrievedfrom" http://www.preventconnect.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nine_Principles_of_Effective_Prevention_Programs "

    http://www.preventconnect.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nine_Principles_of_Effective_Prevention_Programshttp://www.preventconnect.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nine_Principles_of_Effective_Prevention_Programs
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    Prevention Strategies

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    Bystander Intervention

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    Social Norms

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    Media Literacy

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    Education and Skill Building

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