- Get Help
- Help for students
- Help for faculty and staff
- Make a report
- Relationship Violence
- Resources for respondents
- Self care
- Translated SVSPO Brochures
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Phone and Video Guidelines
- Supporting Survivors
- Education & Prevention
- Request a Workshop
- Safer Campuses for Everyone
- Active Bystander Network
- InterroBang
- Definitions
- Consent Matters
- Sexual Assault Awareness Month
- Safe(r) Party Initiative
- Active Bystander Intervention
- December 6
- Blog
- ACTIVE BYSTANDER
- CONSENT
- Yes, No, Maybe So: The Inner Workings of Consent
- Sextortion
- Yes/No/Maybe Checklist
- Cyberconsent and How to Practice Consent Online
- Curious About Consent?
- The importance of pronouns
- Sexting: tips on staying safe(r)
- A Conversation on Cyberconsent
- Are Tea and Consent Simple?
- Consent Is Not Cancelled
- How We Can Contribute to Consent Culture Every Day
- Yes Means Yassss: Improving Consent Education Among Queer Men
- Isn’t that kind of…unsexy?
- My Ode to You
- Back to School 101: 5 Things I Wish Someone Had Told Me About Consent
- Sexual Violence in Intimate Relationships
- Why Consent Matters
- CULTURE, SUPPORT, AND CARE
- InterroBang: A new game to get to know yourself and others
- Content Notes: From Either/Or to Both/And
- The STEM Gender Gap in Focus
- Moving Past COVID
- Top 6 podcasts you should listen to
- Guide to BIPOC Support Services
- Why are Women in STEM Still Unsafe? Commemorating L'École Polytechnique Massacre With Action
- Boundary-Setting In The Age Of COVID
- Tips for survivors who might find wearing a mask challenging: Tips and tricks during COVID-19
- Plain Language Resource Sheets for Survivors & Respondents
- Your First SFU Policy Summary: GP 44 Policy in Plain Language
- Do You Even Cry, Bro? - Canadian healthy masculinity programs
- From “boys will be boys” to “boys can be…”: Some thoughts on masculinity
- Supporting Someone By Listening
- Women Deliver Mobilization: A World and Relationships with Gender-Based Violence
- Self-care Tips for Survivors
- Transformative Justice and Community Accountability: Changing behavior and justice
- Working Towards a Culture of Care and Support Within Your Community
- Dear SFU faculty: It's on all of us to respond to sexual violence
- Understanding Sexual Violence: A Graduate Student's Perspective
- SFU Athletics Listen Believe Empower Campaign
- A Conversation with Lorelei Williams about Modern Day Colonialism
- HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS
- SAFE(R) PARTYING
- ANONYMOUS DISCLOSURES
- Comic
- Faculty
- About Us
- Contact Us
- Leave Site Now
We envision a university community and society where individuals are empowered to live, work and learn fully, free from sexual violence.
GOALS
- To offer survivor-centered trauma informed supports, referrals and information to Survivors of sexual violence
- To provide support, referrals and information to all those impacted by sexual violence, including those who receive disclosures of sexual violence
- To eliminate barriers to supports and services for LGBTQ2S+ people, Indigenous people, people of colour, international students, sex workers, people with disabilities, and people from all ages, classes and cultures
- To provide education and training to SFU’s three campus communities and Fraser International College (FIC) on responding to disclosures of sexual violence, active bystander intervention, consent, media literacy, healthy relationships, Policy GP 44 and other related issues
- To work closely and collaborate with on and off campus groups, organizations and other institutions of higher education to enhance our work
KEY ACTIVITIES
- Supports: Referrals to counselling and medical services, safety planning, academic and workplace accommodations, self-care resources and assistance navigating resources
- Reporting and complaints: Assistance in making an informed decision about next steps should an individual choose to report to authorities within the university or to the police
- Information: Provide up-to-date community resource information
- Education: Deliver education, programming, training and awareness activities with campus partners through an evidence-based approach to prevention and intervention
- Statistics: Maintain non-identifying annual data on disclosures and reports of sexual violence on campus
- Policy Review: Participate in the periodic evaluations of Policy GP 44 and its related initiatives
- Advisory Panel: Establish an advisory panel to act as a resource for the SVSPO, composed of experts from the University Community who have knowledge and experience in reducing, preventing and responding to sexual violence