Forum calls for consent culture initiatives on Canadian campuses (LINK)
Student conference held on the U of O campus makes its point. Are university administrations hearing this? Where is the official forum that would have heard the students? Will resources be allocated for student-lead initiatives?Now, leaving hockey players aside for a moment, do powerful executives ever participate in rape culture? It seems to me that the student politicians could also focus on obtaining a policy with teeth that admits that the problem can lie with deans, VPs, and presidents, rather than effectively treat the highest echelons as beyond reproach and beyond any real accountability regarding complaints, except when Allan Rock decides to throw one under the bus.
Any such policy without real and apparent teeth at the top will only serve to widen the gap between students and the top executives, and between university employees and their bosses.
Here (below) is a video look at the need to include transparency and accountability at the highest levels when it comes to rape culture. How can rape culture be changed if we condone blindness to the institution's dominance hierarchy?
Will there be transparency regarding the content and frequency of the training provided to deans? Will there be special training for VPs and the President? Will we know what that training or education consists in? Who will have the gravitas to provide that training? Will there be a final exam and grades to ensure certification?
Getting serious about rape culture must include a horizontal policy field that corrects for hierarchical power.
1 comment:
Plus any rape culture policy will in practice be used exclusively as a tool against men. Lower class males mostly but possibly used to lynch the odd high status male (see jian ghomeshi) etc. There will inevitably be no intention of ever using the policy to hold a female accountable although the policy will not explicitly state that of course.
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