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Culture of Consent: What are USC programs doing to prevent campus sexual assault?

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Culture of Consent USC has built an approach to sexual assault prevention predicated on a multilayered series of educational components. All new students are required to take online asynchronous training in sexual assault prevention; undergrads receive supplemental facilitated education through 120 minutes of live discussions in years 1, 2, and 3—the Consent and Healthy Relationships (CHR) curriculum. More than 10,000 undergraduates participated in nearly 1,000 discussions this past year, encompassing 92% of the incoming first-year students.

92% Completion rate of "Trojans Respect Consent," the first of three annual live session discussions required for undergraduates, Rate reflects Academic Year 22-23.

Pre- and post-CHR surveys have found statistically significant changes in attitudes towards power dynamics and harmful social norms; relationship boundaries; gender and relationship expectations intervention readiness; and survivor autonomy.

"Respect for others, including respect for self-identified genders, and sexual


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