DARTMOUTH SUMMIT ON SEXUAL ASSAULT PRESENTER BIOGRAPHIES

SUNDAY, JULY 13 7:00 PM PLENARY

Before joining Dartmouth as Dean of the College in 2011, Dean Charlotte Johnson served as Vice President and Dean of the College at Colgate University, where she was the Chief Student Affairs Officer. Prior to her time at Colgate, Johnson served as the Assistant Dean for Student Affairs at the University of Michigan Law School. As Dean of the College at Dartmouth, Johnson has served as Dartmouth’s Chief Student Affairs Officer, providing leadership for a comprehensive set of undergraduate student affairs programs and services. Dean Johnson will be leaving Dartmouth on August 1st to become the Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students at Scripps College in Claremont, California.

Ann McLane Kuster '78 was elected to the United States Congress to represent New Hampshire's 2nd District in November 2012, and was sworn into office on January 3, 2013. She is the first woman to ever represent the district in Congress. She is a member of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs, the House Committee on Agriculture, and the House Small Business Committee. As a longtime community activist, author, attorney, and advocate, Annie has focused her career on increasing access to affordable health care and higher education for families. Active in community service, Annie served on the Board of Trustees of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, New Hampshire Public Radio, the Capitol Center for the Arts, and Child and Family Services of New Hampshire. She was a Founder of the Women's Fund of New Hampshire and served on the Board of the Tucker Foundation at Dartmouth College to encourage community service. Annie graduated from Dartmouth College in 1978, in the third class with women. She graduated from Georgetown University Law Center in 1984.

Dr. Gail Stern is an educator and curriculum developer with over 20 years of experience in violence prevention education and advocacy. She serves as the Chief Academic Officer of Catharsis Productions, and is the co-author of the non-stranger prevention programs SEX SIGNALS, and the creator of the programs Beat The Blame Game and The Canary in the Mineshaft. She trains on the subjects of sexual assault, domestic violence, and hate crime for a range of audiences, including military leadership and law enforcement, in addition to co-developing sexual violence prevention curricula for the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Naval Academy. She is a subject matter expert on sexual violence prevention for each branch of the armed forces.

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MONDAY, JULY 14 9:00 AM PLENARY

Philip J. Hanlon ’77 took office as the 18th president of Dartmouth College in June 2013. Hanlon earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Dartmouth, from which he graduated Phi Beta Kappa, then went on to obtain a doctorate from the California Institute of Technology. Prior to coming to Dartmouth, he most recently served as Provost and the Donald J. Lewis Professor of Mathematics at the University of Michigan. In his role as President, Hanlon has prioritized

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keeping Dartmouth at the forefront of undergraduate education, increasing experiential learning opportunities, and expanding Dartmouth’s mark on global issues. As a mathematician, Hanlon focuses on probability and combinatorics, the study of finite structures and their significance as they relate to bioinformatics, computer science, and other fields. His research has earned numerous honors and awards, Sloan and Guggenheim Fellowships, the National Science Foundation Presidential Young Instigator Award, and he is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Dr. David Lisak is a researcher and forensic consultant who for 27 years has studied the causes and consequences of interpersonal violence. His work has focused on the long term effects of sexual abuse in men, the relationship between child abuse and violence, and the motives and characteristics of rapists. Dr. Lisak received his Ph.D. from and for 23 years served on the faculty of the University of Massachusetts Boston, where he taught and conducted and supervised research. His research has been published in leading scientific journals, and he was the founding editor of the journal, Psychology of Men and Masculinity. Dr. Lisak now serves as a consultant to judicial, prosecutor and law enforcement education programs across the country. He has conducted workshops in all fifty states. He consults widely with universities, the four services of the U.S. Military, the Department of Defense, and other institutions regarding sexual assault prevention and policies, and frequently serves as an expert witness in homicide and sexual assault cases. Dr. Lisak is a founding board member of 1in6, a non- profit agency that serves men who were sexually abused as children.

MONDAY, JULY 14 10:15 AM - 12:00 PM PLENARY - The Water in Which We Swim: The Role of Media in Promoting a 'Rape Culture'

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Sut Jhally is Professor of Communication at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and Founder and Executive Director of the Media Education Foundation (MEF). He is one of the world's leading scholars looking at the role played by advertising and popular culture in the processes of social control and identity construction. The author of numerous books and articles on media (including The Codes of Advertising and Enlightened Racism) he is also an award-winning teacher (a recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award at the University of Massachusetts, where the student newspaper has also voted him "Best professor"). He is best known as the producer and director of a number of films and videos (including Dreamworlds: Desire/Sex/Power in Music Video; Tough Guise: Media, Violence and the Crisis of Masculinity; and Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear & the Selling of American Empire) that deal with issues ranging from gender, sexuality and race to commercialism, violence and politics. Born in Kenya, raised in England, educated in graduate studies in Canada, he currently lives in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Jackson Katz, Ph.D., is an educator, lecturer and cultural theorist who is internationally recognized as a pioneer in the fields of gender violence prevention education and critical media literacy. He is cofounder of the Mentors in Violence Prevention (MVP) program, which introduced the "bystander" approach to the sexual assault and relationship abuse prevention fields. MVP has been widely influential in the development of prevention programming in colleges, high schools, amateur and professional sports culture, the U.S. and Australian militaries and elsewhere. Katz is also the creator of the award-winning documentaries Tough Guise and Tough Guise 2, and author of The Macho Paradox and Leading Men.

Jean Kilbourne is internationally recognized for her groundbreaking work on the image of women in advertising and her critical studies of alcohol and tobacco advertising. She is the author of the award-winning book Can’t Buy My Love: How Advertising Changes the Way We

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Think and Feel and So Sexy So Soon: The New Sexualized Childhood and What Parents Can Do to Protect Their Kids. The prize-winning films based on her lectures include Killing Us Softly, Spin the Bottle, and Slim Hopes. She holds an honorary position as Senior Scholar at the Wellesley Centers for Women.

MONDAY, JULY 14 1:30 – 3:00 PM PLENARY - Sexual Assault on Campus: Federal Perspectives Catherine E. Lhamon, U.S. Department of Education Anurima Bhargava, U.S. Department of Justice

Moderator: N. Bruce Duthu (Dartmouth)

Catherine E. Lhamon is the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education. Ms. Lhamon’s 17-year track record of success has earned her repeat accolades as one of California’s top women lawyers, and as a lawyer of the year for civil rights. She was also named one of California’s Top 20 Lawyers Under 40 in 2007. Immediately prior to coming to the Department of Education, Ms. Lhamon was the Director of Impact Litigation at Public Counsel, which is the nation’s largest pro bono law firm. Before coming to Public Counsel, Ms. Lhamon practiced for a decade at the ACLU of Southern California, ultimately as Assistant Legal Director. Before then, Ms. Lhamon was a teaching fellow and supervising attorney in the Appellate Litigation Program at Georgetown University Law Center after clerking for The Honorable William A. Norris on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She received her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she was The Outstanding Woman Law Graduate, and graduated summa cum laude from Amherst College.

Anurima Bhargava is the Chief of the Educational Opportunities Section of the Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of Justice. She leads the Section’s efforts to provide equal educational opportunities for all students by enforcing federal statutes that prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, language status, religion and disability. Prior to joining the Department of Justice in 2010, Ms. Bhargava served as the Director of the Education Practice at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, where she was actively engaged in litigation and advocacy to expand educational access and opportunity for students of color. She previously served as a staff attorney at the New York City Department of Education and clerked on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. She earned her law degree from Columbia Law School and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College.

N. Bruce Duthu is an internationally recognized scholar of Native American law and policy. He joined the regular faculty at Dartmouth in 2008 as professor of Native American Studies. Professor Duthu earned his BA degree in religion and Native American studies from Dartmouth College and his JD degree from Loyola University School of Law in New Orleans. Prior to joining the Dartmouth faculty, Professor Duthu was on the law faculty at Vermont Law School. He served as the law school’s Vice Dean for Academic Affairs and as director of the VLS-Sun Yat-sen University (Guangzhou, China) Partnership in Environmental Law. He also served as visiting professor of law at Harvard Law School, the universities of Wollongong and Sydney in New South Wales, Australia, and the University of Trento in northern Italy. Professor Duthu has published articles in the Harvard Human Rights Journal, the Indigenous Law Bulletin (Sydney, Australia), the Arizona State Law Journal, the American Indian Law Review, the Vermont Law Review and Vermont Journal of Environmental Law. His published commentary has appeared in , the New York Post, and the Navajo Times.

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TUESDAY, JULY 15 8:30 – 10:00 AM PLENARY: Voices Leslie Morgan Steiner; Curt and Christie Brungardt; Laura Dunn; Susan Brison (Dartmouth)

Moderator: Claudia Bayliff

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Leslie Morgan Steiner is a bestselling author and member of the One Love Foundation National Advisory Council. The One Love Foundation was established in 2010 by Sharon and Lexie Love, as well as additional family and friends to honor the memory of Yeardley Reynolds Love. The “One” represents the number Yeardley wore on her jersey during her high school and college lacrosse career. The number has since been retired by the University of Virginia in her memory. Steiner’s connection with relationship violence is a personal one; her own life experiences inspired her New York Times bestseller and upcoming Lifetime television movie Crazy Love. Steiner is a frequent speaker about family violence as a celebrity board member for the National Domestic Violence Hotline, a member of Liz Claiborne’s MADE council, and a former spokeswoman for The Harriet Tubman Center in Minneapolis, the country’s oldest shelter for abused women and children. Steiner is also the editor of the highly acclaimed anthology Mommy Wars and a former columnist for washingtonpost.com.

Drs. Curt and Christie Brungardt are best known as social entrepreneurs who have worked tirelessly to address issues of injustice and inequality. Combined they have 41 years in higher education where they have been active in the fields of leadership development and civic engagement. Dr. Curt Brungardt is the Voss Distinguished Professor of Leadership Studies and the Executive Director of the Center for Civic Leadership at Fort Hays State University (FHSU) in Hays, Kansas. Dr. Christie Brungardt is an Assistant Professor of Leadership Studies and the Director of the Women’s Leadership Project at FHSU. On July 3rd 2008, Curt and Christie’s lives changed forever. Their daughter, Jana Mackey, a 25 year-old law student at the University of Kansas was murdered by her ex-boyfriend in Lawrence, Kansas. Since Jana’s death, Curt and Christie have transformed themselves from academics to activists working nationally to reduce gender-based violence. Nearly five years ago, they established the education and violence prevention organization- Jana’s Campaign, Inc. They believe it is their responsibility to use both the story of Jana’s life and the story of her death to reduce gender and relationship violence.

Laura Dunn, J.D., is a nationally recognized campus sexual violence survivor and founder of SurvJustice recently featured in Rolling Stone Magazine, MSNBC and the National Law Journal. In 2007, Dunn graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a B.A. in Legal Studies and Psychology with a certificate in Criminal Justice. As a student she became an outspoken survivor and filed a Title IX complaint against the UW. In 2010, her struggle for justice was featured by the Center for Public Integrity and NPR. In 2014, Dunn received a J.D. from the University of Maryland where she graduated Order of the Barristers and with the William P. Cunningham Award for her national campus activism, which included successfully lobbying for the passage of the 2013 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) Reauthorization, advising the White House Task Force Protecting Students Against Sexual Assault, and serving as the primary student negotiator on the U.S. Department of Education’s VAWA Rulemaking Committee.

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Susan J. Brison, Ph.D., is Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Dartmouth College and has held visiting positions at Tufts, Princeton, and NYU. Having survived a near-fatal rape and murder attempt in France in 1990, she has first-hand experience of how traumatic violence shatters a self and of how a self can be rebuilt in connection with others. Through her book, Aftermath: Violence and the Remaking of a Self (Princeton University Press, 2002), and her scholarly articles and lectures, she has brought greater philosophical attention to the topics of rape, domestic violence, hate speech, and pornography. A prominent voice in the anti-rape movement for nearly twenty-five years, she has raised public awareness of gender-based violence through international talks and radio interviews as well as articles in the The New York Times Magazine, The Guardian, The San Francisco Chronicle, and other newspapers, magazines, and blogs.

Claudia J. Bayliff is an attorney and educator with more than twenty-six years of experience working on issues related to sexual assault. She is currently serving as the National Judicial Education Program’s (NJEP) Project Attorney, developing judicial educational materials about sexual assault and helping to implement a nationwide, comprehensive plan for judicial education about sexual assault. She was the first Chief of the United States Air Force’s worldwide Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Program. She has also consulted with the Department of the Navy, the Navy and the Marine Corps to help them develop their sexual assault prevention strategy and with United States Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) to assist them in their efforts to improve how they investigate sexual assault cases. Ms. Bayliff has presented for such organizations as the Second International Conference on Training of the Judiciary, the Canadian National Judicial Institute, the National Center for Victims of Crime, the National Association of Women Judges, the National Association of State Judicial Educators, the National Coalition Against Sexual Assault, and at numerous other national and local conferences.

TUESDAY, JULY 15 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS (conference registrants only)

A. Engaging Multiple Levels of the Social Ecology to Prevent Sexual and Relationship Violence and Stalking on Campus Jane Stapleton (UNH)

Jane Stapleton, M.A., serves as Co-Director of the University of New Hampshire Prevention Innovations: Research and Practices for Ending Violence Against Women and has extensive experience in working to end violence against women in a college/university setting. She coordinates the National Training and Technical Assistance Consortium to Prevent Sexual and Relationship Violence and Stalking. She is a lead developer and evaluator of the Know-Your-Power® Bystander Social Marketing Campaign and is working to expand the mediums for disseminating the campaign. Jane trains colleges, universities and community organizations how to facilitate Bringing in the Bystander ® and implement comprehensive strategies to end violence. She teaches in both the Women’s Studies Program and the Family Studies and Social Work Departments at UNH, and currently serves on the Board of Directors for the School and College Organization for Prevention Educators (SCOPE). As an activist, administrator, policy maker, service provider and researcher, she has worked in the field of ending sexual and relationship violence and stalking for 28 years.

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B. Evaluation Strategies to Assess the Efficacy of Campus Prevention Programs Sharyn Potter (UNH)

Sharyn J. Potter, Ph.D., MPH, is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and Co- Director and Co-Founder, of Prevention Innovations, Research and Practices for Ending Violence Against Women on Campus, a research and development unit at the University of New Hampshire. Prevention Innovations was identified in “Not Alone: The First Report of the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault” released on April 29, 2014. Dr. Potter has a doctoral degree in medical sociology and a masters degree in public health from . Dr. Potter co-leads the development, dissemination and evaluation and of the Know Your Power® Bystander Social Marketing Campaign that raises awareness regarding the problems of sexual and relationship violence and stalking. The campaign images model prosocial behaviors that target audience members can use in situations where sexual and relationship violence and stalking are occurring, have occurred or have the potential to occur. Nine peer-reviewed papers describe the research findings from the campaign. She will be leading research efforts identified in the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault on the University of New Hampshire Campus.

C. Sexual Violence and LGBTQ Student Communities: What We Know, and New Directions for Practice and Research Susan Marine (Merrimack College)

Susan Marine, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor and Program Director in Higher Education at Merrimack College. She has 20 years of experience leading initiatives in higher education for the advancement of women and gender non-conforming students. In addition to directing sexual violence prevention initiatives on three different college campuses, she most recently served as Assistant Dean of Harvard College for Student Life and Director of the Harvard College Women’s Center. She teaches courses in higher education history, theory, and practice, and her research focuses on feminist praxis and LGBT student inclusion in higher education. She is the author of Stonewall's Legacy: Bisexual, gay, lesbian and transgender students in higher education.

D. News from the Front Lines: Student Conduct Systems Sue Wasiolek (Duke); Jeanne Lord (Georgetown University); Don Ostdiek (Rice University); Daren Mooko (Pomona College)

Sue Wasiolek has worked in the Division of Student Affairs at Duke University for the past thirty-five years (except for a brief nine month hiatus to practice law). During this time, she has served as the Assistant to the Dean for Student life, the Dean for Student Life and currently works as an Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students. Her areas of responsibility and oversight have included new student orientation, judicial affairs, residential life, parent programs, fraternity and sorority life, disability services, leadership development, case management, student health and wellness, counseling and psychological services, mediation, crisis response and numerous “other duties as assigned.” Sue has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Science Education, a Master of Health and Hospital Administration and a Master of Law degree from Duke. She has also completed a Juris Doctor degree from North Carolina Central University and a Doctor of Education from the University of Pennsylvania.

Jeanne Fielding Lord is completing her nineteenth year in the Division of Student Affairs at Georgetown University, where she serves as Associate Vice President for Student Affairs and Deputy Title IX Coordinator for Undergraduate Students. She holds appointments in the departments of Catholic Studies and American Studies at Georgetown University; Jeanne also serves as Director of the Association of Jesuit Colleges Universities’ Seminar on Higher Education Leadership. Jeanne earned her undergraduate degree at the Medical College of Virginia, and holds a J.D from The Catholic University of America and 6

an Ed.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. She is a frequent speaker on the topic of women’s leadership, and in 2009 was invited to give the Rita Casella Jones Lecture at the Francis and Ann Curran Center for American Catholic Studies at Fordham University. In 2011, she was elected to honorary membership in Alpha Sigma Nu, and last year received the Matteo Ricci Award from the John Carroll Fellows Program at Georgetown.

Dr. Don Ostdiek has served for the past four years as Associate Dean of Undergraduates at Rice University in Houston, Texas, and before that as Rice’s Assistant Dean of Judicial Programs. He chairs the Consultation and Assessment Team, the university’s multidisciplinary behavior assessment team which tracks students of concern or otherwise at-risk. At Rice, Dr. Ostdiek oversees the Student Judicial Office, the Rice Counseling Center, and the Student Wellbeing Office, which provided retention and case management support. As Dean, Dr. Ostdiek also oversees the Study Abroad Office where he has had a long standing academic interest in internationalizing the curriculum. Dr. Ostdiek received his PhD in American Government and Public Policy from the Political Science Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and at Rice also directs the undergraduate Policy Studies Program and occasionally teaches courses in Public Policy Analysis and Bureaucracy.

Daren Mooko is the Associate Dean of Students at Pomona College. In his role as Associate Dean of Students, Daren serves as the College’s Title IX Coordinator, Advisor to the Student Judiciary Council and as Junior and Senior Dean. He also served as Director of the Asian American Resource Center at Pomona College for 11 years during which time, the Claremont Colleges approved the Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies. Mooko earned his BA in English from San Diego State University, and his M.Ed. at The University of Vermont in Higher Education and Student Affairs Administration.

E. The Psychology of Offenders and Investigation Strategies, Part I Dr. David Lisak and Claire Harwell

-For David Lisak’s bio, please see page 1.

Claire Harwell, J.D., is the Director of the Community Justice Project for the New Mexico Coalition of Sexual Assault Programs, Inc. Claire has worked in sexual assault prevention and response for over three decades. As a victim advocate and prevention expert, she worked with rape crisis centers in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and New Mexico. She has also served as a state-certified campus law enforcement officer, attaining the rank of Corporal (a training officer) in the state of North Carolina. Later, as a sex crimes prosecutor, she worked in a district attorney’s office, and as the Director of the NM Attorney General’s office Violence Against Women Division. She advises universities, the U.S. military, prosecutors’ offices, and the U.S. Dept. of Justice on matters relating to effective response to crimes of sexual violence. She is the manager of the New Mexico Coalition of Sexual Assault Program’s Community Justice Project, a specialized non-profit legal practice at eight sites across the state of N.M., in this role she personally represents sexual assault survivors statewide in a wide range of civil and criminal law issues.

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F. Clery Update and Discussion Dana Scaduto (Dickinson) and Robert Donin (Dartmouth)

Dana Scaduto is General Counsel at Dickinson College, a position she has held since 2002. Before that, Dana was in private practice in Harrisburg PA where she founded and served as the chairperson of her firm's education practice and as a member of its intellectual property and litigation practice groups. Dana is a frequent speaker and presenter on a variety of higher education topics. Since 1995, Dana has been an active member of the National Association of College and University Attorneys ("NACUA"). She has served in various leadership roles at NACUA, including two terms of service as a member of the Board of Directors (2007 - 2010, 2011 - 2014), and having recently concluded a term of service as NACUA's Chair of the Board of Directors (2012-2013). Dana has also presented at numerous NACUA conferences and virtual seminars. Dana is also a member of the Legal Services Review Panel for the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities. Most recently, in her service to higher education, Dana was honored to be selected as a negotiator in the rulemaking process for the amendments to VAWA and Clery that concluded in April. The amendments were published in the Federal Register for public comment on June 20. Dana received an A.B. in English Literature from Purdue University and a J.D. from the Indiana University School of Law.

Bob Donin is General Counsel of Dartmouth College, a position he has held since August, 2000. Prior to coming to Dartmouth, Bob was an attorney with Harvard University Office of the General Counsel, where he served as Deputy General Counsel (1997-2000), Administrative Coordinator (1993-97), and University Attorney (1984-92). Before joining the Harvard legal staff, he was a partner with the Washington, D.C. firm of Verner, Liipfert, Bernhard & McPherson, where he practiced litigation and administrative law. A graduate of Colgate University, Bob received his J.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and an LL.M. degree from the University of London, where he was a Fulbright/Hays Scholar in International Law. Bob is a member of the board of directors of the National Association of College and University Attorneys (NACUA) and Kendal at Hanover (a continuing care retirement community).

TUESDAY, JULY 15 2:00 – 3:00 PM PLENARY - Review of the First Report of the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault

Lynn Rosenthal is the White House Advisor on Violence Against Women. From 2000 to 2006, Ms. Rosenthal was the Executive Director and President of the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV). She also served as executive director of a local domestic violence shelter in North Florida and has led state domestic violence coalitions in Florida and New Mexico. While serving in the White House, Lynn has coordinated efforts to reduce domestic violence homicides, address domestic violence in the workplace, raise awareness about the effects of violence on youth, and improve the nation’s response to sexual violence. Lynn is a senior advisor to Vice President Biden and serves on the White House Council on Women and Girls.

Bea Hanson is the Principal Deputy Director of the United States Department of Justice Office on Violence Against Women (OVW). In her role, Ms. Hanson serves as the liaison between the Department of Justice and federal, state, tribal, and international governments on matters involving violence against women. She is responsible for developing the Department’s legal and policy positions regarding the implementation of the Violence Against Women Act and overseeing an annual budget of nearly $400 million. She has served as OVW’s Principal Deputy Director since May 2011. Ms. Hanson previously served as Chief Program Officer for Safe Horizon, a crime victim service organization in New York City that serves 350,000 victims annually, where she directed a staff of 500 in 60 locations. She joined Safe Horizon (formerly Victim Services) in 1997 as the Director of Emergency Services and went on to oversee the agency’s domestic violence, homeless youth, and child abuse programs before being promoted to Chief Program Officer. Ms. Hanson earned a 8

Doctor of Philosophy in Social Welfare degree from City University in New York, a Master of Social Work degree from Hunter College School of Social Work in New York, and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

3:15 – 4:30 PM CONCURRENT SESSIONS (conference registrants only)

G. Multiple Approaches to Bystander Intervention Sharyn Potter and Jane Stapleton (UNH); Dorothy Edwards (Green Dot,etc.); Jackson Katz

Moderator: Kathryn Lively (Dartmouth)

-For bios of Sharyn Potter and Jane Stapleton (UNH), and Jackson Katz, please see pages 5 and 2, respectively.

Dr. Dorothy J. Edwards, author of the Green Dot Violence Prevention Strategy, holds a Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from Texas Woman’s University. Prior to her current position, serving as the Executive Director of Green Dot, etc., a center dedicated to effective intervention and prevention of power-based personal violence, Dr. Edwards served for five years as the founding Director of the University of Kentucky Violence Intervention and Prevention Center. She has worked in both counseling and teaching capacities in higher education. With a specialty in primary prevention, she provides training and consultation in the areas of power-based personal violence, organizational capacity building, program implementation, strategic planning and community mobilization. Dr. Edwards is currently working with government entities, state coalitions, military, non-profits, community organizations, high schools and colleges from around the globe.

Kathryn Lively is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Sociology Department (affiliated with Women and Gender Studies) at Dartmouth College. Kathryn's research and teaching interests include social psychology, identity, and emotion. Kathryn currently teaches a class called Love, Dating, Intimacy and Romance, which deals primarily with interpersonal relations and campus life. Her scholarship has appeared in a number of academic journals, including American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Social Psychology Quarterly, Emotion Review, Work & Occupations, and Symbolic Interaction. She has authored one book, Symbols, Selves, and Social Reality: A Symbolic Interaction Approach to Social Psychology and Sociology and ten book chapters. Kathryn served on Dartmouth's Committee for Student Safety and Accountability, as well as the Committee on Standards and the Organizational Adjudication committee. Nationally, she has acted as the chair of the Emotions Section of the American Sociology Association and is currently acting council for the association's section of Social Psychology.

H. Using the Social Norms Approach to Reduce Sexual Violence and Foster Bystander Intervention Alan Berkowitz

Alan David Berkowitz, Ph.D., is an independent consultant who helps colleges, universities, public health agencies, the military, and communities design programs that address health and social justice issues. Dr. Berkowitz frequently conducts workshops government departments and assault prevention coalitions on men’s responsibility for preventing rape, the use of media to prevent violence, bystander intervention theory and skills, and on effective prevention programs. He has pioneered the development of social norms media to prevent men’s violence and is the founding editor of The Report on Social Norms, and the author of a book on bystander theory, research and intervention skills. Alan has been a 9

presenter and on the planning committee for the National Sexual Assault Prevention Conferences hosted by the Centers for Disease Control, is a founding member of the Board of Directors of End Violence Against Women International, and is a subject matter expert for the United States Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force on sexual assault prevention. Dr. Berkowitz received the Ph.D. in Psychology from Cornell University in 1981 and has received five awards from national organizations.

I. Investigation Strategies, Part II Lisa Friel and Anne Munch

Lisa M. Friel joined T&M Protection Resources in October 2011 as Vice President of the Sexual Misconduct Consulting & Investigations division following a distinguished 28 year career as a Manhattan prosecutor. Hired by District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau in 1983, Ms. Friel specialized in sexual assault cases for the majority of her career at the District Attorney’s Office. She was the Chief of the Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit for nearly a decade and its Deputy Chief for 11 years. Since joining T&M, Ms. Friel and her staff have developed policies and procedures, provided training workshops and conducted sensitive investigations into issues of sexual misconduct (both sexual assault and sexual harassment), stalking, and domestic and dating violence for primary and secondary schools, colleges and universities, athletic teams and leagues (collegiate and professional), non-profit organizations, corporations and private individuals. An instructor, educator, lecturer, mother of three college-age children and former Division 1 varsity player and coach, Ms. Friel has connected with diverse audiences ranging from seasoned detectives to school children, doctors to volunteer sexual assault advocates, administrators to faculty and staff, as well as athletes and athletic personnel at all levels. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in history from Dartmouth College, graduating cum laude and received her Juris Doctor from the University of Virginia School of Law, graduating Order of the Coif (top 7% of the class).

Anne Munch is an attorney with 23 years of experience as a prosecutor and educator in the area of sexual assault, domestic violence and stalking. She prosecuted cases in three different jurisdictions in Colorado for thirteen years and specialized in crimes of interpersonal violence. Ms. Munch also directed the Ending Violence Against Women project in Colorado and is currently the owner of Anne Munch Consulting, Inc. where she is a recognized subject matter expert whose work expands across the US, Asia and Europe. Ms. Munch regularly works with colleges and universities on the issue of sexual assault. She works extensively in the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Programs for the military where she co-developed the Bystander Intervention program for the US Air Force and the two-week Sexual Assault Special Victims Investigations course for Army CID. Ms. Munch regularly speaks at state, national and international conferences on topics related to violence against women. She is on the teaching faculty for the International Association of Chiefs of Police, is a visiting scholar at The Women’s College at the University of Denver, and is a part time municipal court judge in Lakewood, CO.

J. News from the front lines: Campus Direct Service Providers Commander Lyn Hammer (U.S. Naval Academy); Jacqueline Deitch Stackhouse (Princeton)

Commander Lyn Y. Hammer graduated from the U. S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., in 1992 with a Bachelor of Science in Political Science and a Minor in Russian language. In June 1999 she earned a Masters of Science Degree in Management from the University of Maryland University College. She is a certified Senior Professional in Human Resources by the Human Resource Certification Institute. Her professional military education includes the Defense Language Institute, where she graduated with proficiency in the Italian language; the Italian Joint War College, earning a dual Masters degree from this war college and 10

from the University of Milan in International Military Strategic Studies, as well as Joint Military Professional Education Phase I. In June 2009 she graduated from Joint Forces Staff College, earning JPME Phase II from the Joint and Combined Warfighting School. Commander Hammer currently serves as the Manager for the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (SAPR) Program at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Jacqueline Deitch-Stackhouse is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with a Masters in Social Service and Masters in Law and Social Policy from Bryn Mawr College. She is the Director for the Sexual Harassment/Assault Advising, Resources & Education (SHARE) office at Princeton University where she oversees the campus-wide prevention initiatives and intervention services for victims/survivors and co-survivors of interpersonal violence.

K. Institutional Betrayal in Higher Ed: Assessing and Preventing Added Harm in Campus Sexual Violence Carly Smith (U. of Oregon)

Carly Smith, MA, MS, is a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology at the University of Oregon where she works under the supervision of Dr. Jennifer Freyd. She earned a master’s degree in experimental psychology from Wake Forest University. Her research has extended the theoretical base of Dr. Freyd’s interpersonal trauma framework (Betrayal Trauma Theory) to encompass institutions and provided the first empirical investigations of the form, impact, and mechanisms of Institutional Betrayal using the Institutional Betrayal Questionnaire. Her work has been featured in The Journal of Traumatic Stress and American Psychologist. In addition to her research, Smith teaches courses at the University of Oregon including the Psychology of Trauma, Research Methods, and Statistics. She is a member of the University of Oregon Coalition to End Sexual Violence and was nominated by the university senate to serve on the Task Force to End Sexual Violence and Support Survivors. Her clinical training is in empirically-supported cognitive behavioral treatments and she works with both university students and community members who have experienced traumatic events. Smith also serves as the editorial assistant for the Journal of Trauma & Dissociation and co-edited a special issue on Systemic Trauma.

TUESDAY, JULY 15 4:45 – 5:15 PM CLOSING PLENARY Provost Carolyn Dever

Carolyn Dever took office as provost of Dartmouth College on July 1, 2014. Previously, she served as the dean of the College of Arts and Science at Vanderbilt University beginning in 2008. Before joining the Vanderbilt community in 1999, she was a tenured member of the faculty at New York University. A scholar of gender studies and 19th-century British literature and culture, she brings more than a decade of leadership experience in higher education administration, a strong commitment to teaching, and a record of academic accomplishment. As Dartmouth’s chief academic officer, Dever is instrumental in long-range institutional planning and implementation, including the integration of academic and student-life programs. She earned an AB in English and American literature from Boston College and her MA and PhD in English and American literature and language from Harvard University.

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