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      ‘I have a sense that it's probably quite bad … but because I don't see it, I don't know’: staff perspectives on ‘lad culture’ in higher education

      1 , 2
      Gender and Education
      Informa UK Limited

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          A systematic review of primary prevention strategies for sexual violence perpetration ☆

          This systematic review examined 140 outcome evaluations of primary prevention strategies for sexual violence perpetration. The review had two goals: 1) to describe and assess the breadth, quality, and evolution of evaluation research in this area; and 2) to summarize the best available research evidence for sexual violence prevention practitioners by categorizing programs with regard to their evidence of effectiveness on sexual violence behavioral outcomes in a rigorous evaluation. The majority of sexual violence prevention strategies in the evaluation literature are brief, psycho-educational programs focused on increasing knowledge or changing attitudes, none of which have shown evidence of effectiveness on sexually violent behavior using a rigorous evaluation design. Based on evaluation studies included in the current review, only three primary prevention strategies have demonstrated significant effects on sexually violent behavior in a rigorous outcome evaluation: Safe Dates (Foshee et al., 2004); Shifting Boundaries (building-level intervention only, Taylor, Stein, Woods, Mumford, & Forum, 2011); and funding associated with the 1994 U.S. Violence Against Women Act (VAWA; Boba & Lilley, 2009). The dearth of effective prevention strategies available to date may reflect a lack of fit between the design of many of the existing programs and the principles of effective prevention identified by Nation et al. (2003).
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            Male peer support and a feminist routing activities theory: Understanding sexual assault on the college campus

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              ‘Ladettes’ and ‘Modern Girls’: ‘troublesome’ young femininities

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Gender and Education
                Gender and Education
                Informa UK Limited
                0954-0253
                1360-0516
                August 15 2018
                August 15 2018
                : 1-16
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Educational Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK
                [2 ] Department of Education, University of York, York, UK
                Article
                10.1080/09540253.2018.1501006
                6e1d7261-147f-40e5-a0d9-2d9e99e9e775
                © 2018
                History

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