Sexual violence "a big problem in universities," says Scott Berkowitz President and founder of the anti-rape network. 1624 "The risks faced by women aged between 16 and 24 outweigh the risks faced by any other category four times. It is a problem more serious than that in universities where many of them do not take this issue seriously, and deal with the charges and allegations through internal judicial procedures. The individuals who write traffic violations in the universities are conducting the investigation in cases of rape. "
It is believed that the nightclub dancers who often perform most of the nudity and the performance of provocative movements in front of an audience of men and women working in the sex trade, are subject to higher rates of abuse than others, despite the lack of accurate statistics in this regard, "says Berkowitz. "Overall, the reluctance of the category of the population to inform the authorities, including exposure to the attacks makes them more vulnerable. I included dancers and nightclubs in this category."
Durham, North Carolina - turned the rape charges against Duke University team to a famous basketball to the Haram al-Pacific focus of national media. Gathered buses of the television in front of the university chapel, and students become accustomed to its presence in the corridors of this campus. However, the extensive media coverage of this event should not blind us to recognize the fact that rapes are not uncommon in universities, advocates say the rights of victims of sexual assault (Department of Justice, 2011).
Every year 70 000 are a college student between the ages of 18 and 24 of sexual assault related to excessive drinking of alcohol or rape while dating, according to the National Network to combat sexual abuse and incest, based in Washington, DC. And alcohol abuses play a role in three-quarters of the rapes that occur in universities. "Every time there's a crime, and gets where everyone is crazy, usually case revolves around the members of the eggs from the top tier in the middle class who live a normal life. They do not consider them as belonging to a world of crime," says Julie Specialist director of public policy in a Break the cycle of violence and based in Los Angeles.
As noted by the media on a large scale, says a dancer in a nightclub that she had been assaulted by three men in a toilet in March 13. And says the woman, a student at the University of North Carolina Central, a black University of Durham-based Duke University, where, it was believed that it will offer dance for a group of five or six men at a private party. “Instead, when I arrived to the concert venue, it is, and as you say, I found the lacrosse team to basketball as a whole. All team members except eggs one person. Says a woman who is black, said that three men dragged her ...