Sexual Assault Awareness

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month

Sexual assault can take many different forms and be defined in different ways, but one thing remains the same: it’s never the victim’s fault.

The term sexual assault refers to sexual contact or behavior that occurs without explicit consent of the victim. Some forms of sexual assault include:

  • Attempted rape
  • Fondling or unwanted sexual touching
  • Forcing a victim to perform sexual acts, such as oral sex or penetrating the perpetrator’s body
  • Penetration of the victim’s body, also known as rape

Sexual Assault is strictly prohibited at Liberty University and is a violation of Liberty University’s Sexual Misconduct Policy.

Get Help Now

Liberty University Police Department

Emergency Line
(434) 592-3911

Non-Emergency Line
(434) 592-7641

Safety Tips

Healthy Relationship Behaviors

We know that the key to preventing sexual misconduct is to cultivate healthy relationships. Healthy relationships are those build on trust, honesty, communication, respect, and consent.

Your relationship is healthy when your friend or partner:

  • Respects your decisions and boundaries
  • Accepts your friends and family
  • Listens to your opinions
  • Trusts you
  • Is happy when you feel fulfilled
  • Supports you when you are upset or get bad news
  • Communicates and gets your approval when making plans
  • Makes sure to have your consent before physical contact

Unhealthy Relationship Behaviors

Your relationship is beginning to become unhealthy when your friend or partner:

  • Ignores you
  • Blackmails you if you refuse to do something
  • Belittles you and your opinion
  • Makes fun of you
  • Manipulates you
  • Is constantly jealous
  • Controls where you go and how you spend your time or money
  • Goes through your texts, emails, or social media messages
  • Insist that you send them intimate photos
  • Isolates you from friends or family

There is violence when your friend or partner:

  • Calls you crazy when you express concern about their actions
  • “Blows a fuse” when they are unhappy about something
  • Pushes, pulls, slaps, shakes, or hits you
  • Threatens suicide because of you
  • Touches you intimately without your consent
  • Threatens to circulate intimate photos of you
  • Forces you to watch pornography
  • Forces you, either physically or through coercion, to have sex

Resources

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