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Addressing Violence Against Women on College Campusesreviewed by Sarah Jane Brubaker & Tammi Slovinsky - August 27, 2018 Title: Addressing Violence Against Women on College Campuses Author(s): Catherine Kaukinen, Michelle Miller, & Rachael A. Powers Publisher: Temple University Press, Philadelphia ISBN: 1439913765, Pages: 330, Year: 2017 Search for book at Amazon.comTo view the full-text for this article you must be signed-in with the appropriate membership. Please review your options below:
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- Sarah Brubaker
Virginia Commonwealth University E-mail Author SARAH JANE BRUBAKER is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice and Public Policy at the L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University. Her research and teaching focus on gender violence, sexual and reproductive health, juvenile justice, qualitative research, and sociological theory. She directs a post-baccalaureate degree program in Gender Violence Intervention and is writing a book based on the required course that she teaches entitled Theorizing Gender Violence. Dr. Brubaker’s recent research projects include a study of campus-based sexual assault victim advocates, a study of a therapeutic model recently implemented in a juvenile correctional facility, and a health needs assessment for low-income families in a housing project.
- Tammi Slovinsky
Virginia Commonwealth University E-mail Author TAMMI SLOVINSKY is Virginia Commonwealth University's (VCU) Deputy Title IX Coordinator for Students. She has served the VCU community since 2011 and has over 25 years’ experience collaborating with campus and community support and safety service providers such as law enforcement, prosecutors, forensic nurses and counselors on the issues of sexual and intimate partner violence.
Between 2013 and 2017, she served as VCU’s Project Director on a U.S. Department of Justice Office on Violence Against Women grant. She has delivered hundreds of educational programs to allied professionals, faculty, students and public policy officials including a Virginia General Assembly house subcommittee as it considered Va. Code § 23.1-806, the mandatory reporting law on campus sexual assault as well as addressing the Virginia Governor’s Task Force on Combating Campus Sexual Assault in 2015. She also participated in an expert panel before congressional aids and media, “How Do We Address Sexual Assault in the New Congress?,” sponsored by the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) and National Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education Forum in Washington, DC.
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