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*CFP Managing, Researching, and Enabling Respectful Sexual Conduct in 
Higher Education **
***
*19 - 20 February 2018 **
**KANTL – The Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature **
**Ghent, Belgium *

A two-day workshop organised by

**ANSER *– Academic Network for Sexual and Reproductive Health and 
Rights Policy, Ghent University <https://www.ugent.be/anser/en>*
**INSEP* – International Network for Sexual Ethics and Politics 
<http://www.insep.ugent.be/>*

*
**!!! Extended Deadline for Abstracts: 15 October 2017 !!!*

Workshop Webpage: http://www.insep.ugent.be/workshops/mre2018/


Campus sexual violence and harassment is endemic. Research shows that 
20% of women at one time during their academic career experience sexual 
assault and that 5% of men undergo unwanted sexual conduct through force 
or incapacitation. Rape, sexual violence, harassment, stalking, having 
to endure unwelcomed sexual attentions - all pose a threat to the 
academic and personal development of students as well of staff. Although 
considered to be the 'gold-standard' in ethical sexual relations, we are 
still confronted with an ethical deficit in sexual conduct within 
institutions that often have the greatest rhetorical commitment to 
ethical values.

 From the late seventies onwards, there has been a growing awareness of 
a widespread (date-)rape crisis and culture and of workplace sexual 
harassment. A growing number of Higher Education Institutions have 
developed strategies, policies and practices to respond to and prevent 
non-consensual sexual relations. They have focused on finding viable 
antidotes to: systemic sexual harassment; the staggering prevalence of 
(often unreported) rape and sexual violence; and problematic sexual 
behaviour within staff-staff, staff-student and student-student 
relations. Yet often these responses have been undermined by their 
relatively secretive and subdued promotion within institutions and the 
difficulties of policing social and sexual relationships.

How much has really changed? How much impact have these initiatives had 
on the prevalence of sexual violence and harassment? How far have policy 
and practice responses been subordinated to issues of institutional 
reputation and liability? How much have these contributed to enabling a 
culture of consensual, open and diverse campus sexuality?

It is time to take stock, learn from the past and plan for the future. 
In this two-day workshop, we’ll be looking at the ways these often 
violent, non-consensual sexual relations have been managed, researched 
and at what has been and can be done to enable consensual sexual 
relations in the academy. The goal is to identify and evaluate best 
practices and strategies, to sketch out a future policy and research 
agenda and to contribute to the development of a respectful and healthy 
sexual culture in Higher Education. We seek to bring together 
researchers, policy makers, academics and students to reflect on the 
sexual politics of higher education and build a collaborative agenda for 
more research and for the development of effective policy tools and 
practice guidance.

We invite proposals for papers addressing the management of, research 
into, and ways to enable consensual and respectful sexual conduct in the 
academy. The two days themselves have already been structured so as to 
direct discussion, with a half day each on:

• Theme 1: Managing sexual (mis)conduct
• Theme 2: Researching (non-)consensual sex
• Theme 3: Enabling consensual and respectful sex

Please indicate the theme(s) most suitable for your presentation. The 
final afternoon will be a feedback and agenda setting session.

We are particularly interested in submission or expressions of interest 
for participation where delegates commit the attending the full 
programme. Given the desire for the workshop to produce tangible 
outcomes, we seek to build a group of committed participants to take the 
project forward. In this respect, participants who do not wish to 
contribute a paper should write explaining their interest in attending 
and participating. The language of the workshop will be English.

Each theme has a particular focus as specified below:

*Theme 1: Managing (non-)Consensual Sex in the Academy – Policies and 
Practices *

We invite contributions that make an empirical and/or programmatic 
contribution to one or more of the following topics:

• the identification of current policy and practice models that either 
provide lessons on (in)effective management or possibilities for best 
practices for comprehensive responses to sexual violence and harassment 
prevention. These should include policies and practices that reflect 
strategies for compliance, implementation, and evaluation

• more specific topics might include, but are not limited to policies 
and practices relating to:

- The many faces of sexual violence: Sexual harassment, Campus rape, 
Gender-based sexual violence, Sexual orientation and identity based 
sexual violence, …
- Procedures and practices: responding strategies to sexual violence 
complaints, lifting barriers to reporting unwanted sex, attention and 
care for victims, fair process, bystander-focused strategies, …
- New technologies of dating & sexualised social media: sexting, 
bullying, privacy and unwanted exposure, …
- Student hook‐up culture, friends with benefits & casual Sex
- Political/Sexual/Gender correctness on campus
- Student unions as sexualised and/or sexuality/identity‐based 
organisations
- Student sex work
*
**Theme 2: Researching (non-)consensual sex in the academy - empirical 
and programmatic *

We invite contributions that make an empirical and/or programmatic 
contribution (e.g., in the form of a research agenda or best practice 
criteria) to one or more of the following topics:

• Contribution to knowledge base

- Establish the prevalence of nonconsensual sex in the academy, 
including all status groups and relationship constellations (i.e., among 
students, between students and faculty, between faculty and non-academic 
staff)
- Clarify the definition and scale of different forms of nonconsensual 
sex (e.g., differentiation between sexual harassment and contact sexual 
victimization)
- Develop/outline a gender-inclusive approach to the study of sexual 
aggression that considers different orientations as well as male 
victimization and female perpetration.
- Develop/outline an approach to the study of sexual aggression that 
considers diversity in relation to ethnicity, race, religion, disability 
and other intersectional differences
- Contribute to the theoretical understanding of risk factors of 
perpetration and vulnerability factors of victimization
- Design and evaluate evidence-based prevention programmes

• Methodological issues and good practice standards

- Respective strengths and limitations of quantitative and qualitative 
approaches to studying nonconsensual sexual experiences in the academy
- Evaluation designs for assessing interventions
- Ethical boundary conditions that need to be observed (a) in the way 
questions are asked, (b) in the way participants are protected 
from/supported in case of negative consequences of thinking and 
reporting about nonconsensual sexual experiences

*Theme 3: Enabling Consensual and Respectful Sex in the Academy: 
Policies and Practices *

We Invite contributions that make an empirical and/or programmatic 
contribution (e.g., in the form of a best practice criteria) to one or 
more of the following topics:

• Identify concepts, models and best practices in comprehensive 
responses to sexual violence and harassment prevention, incorporating 
strategies for compliance, implementation, and evaluation

• Identify concepts models and best practices for creating a safe, 
emancipatory and healthy consent-based campus sexual culture and 
environment

• More specific topics might include, but are not limited to policies 
relating to:

- Best practice exemplars for responding to sexual harassment and violence
- Feminist approaches to sexual violence and harassment
- Anti-oppressive and anti-discriminatory strategies and practices
- Enabling stakeholders and institutional change in procedures and 
structures
- Sex and sexuality education - curriculum and community
- Respecting sexual diversity and recognising sexual differences in 
attitudes, relationships and practices
- Balancing protection and freedom

*Submission & Timeline *

Abstracts for presentations (300 words) or for panels of up to three 
speakers (please submit a 500-600 overview and set of abstracts) should 
reach us by *15 October 2017 *at the latest, as should expressions of 
interest from non-paper giving participants. Notifications of acceptance 
will be sent by *16 October 2017*. A 4-page summary of your paper should 
be send to us by *19 January 2018* for prior circulation, to maximise 
time for discussion, and paper givers should expect to present their 
papers in short and succinct time slots. Please send abstracts to:

/*[log in to unmask] */

The fee for the two-day workshop is 50 Euro. Participation in the 
conference dinner is optional and details of this and suitable 
accommodation will be sent to all those who register. Registration will 
open at the end of October 2017 and close at the beginning of February 
2018.

For more info on INSEP & ANSER please visit: ANSER – 
https://www.ugent.be/anser/ & INSEP – http://www.insep.ugent.be/
More info on the workshop venue (in Dutch): http://kantl.be/