Source: http://ift.tt/hFWySe - Friday, January 30, 2015
After being thrown into the national spotlight on issues of sexual assault, the University of Virginia will consider plans to create a research institute on violence, offer new courses on campus safety and use surveys to create new strategies - all in an effort to become a national leader in improving campus safety. U.Va. President Teresa A. Sullivan made the remarks Friday during a speech to the campus community to address "recent issues." Recently, a U.Va. student was abducted and killed, and then Rolling Stone magazine published a story describing a culture of sexual violence at the school. Sullivan called the previous semester one of the most traumatic in the university's history. "Before the Rolling Stone story was discredited, it seemed to resonate with some people simply because it confirmed their darkest suspicions about universities - that administrations are corrupt; that today's students are reckless and irresponsible; that fraternities are hot-beds of deviant behavior. Working together, we have soundly refuted those suspicions through our actions over the past two months," Sullivan said. The Rolling Stone article focused on an alleged gang rape at a fraternity house in 2012. Charlottesville police said earlier this month that there's no credible evidence that an assault happened here, and other parts of the story have been called into question. The university has been re-evaluating its culture, particularly in regard
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