Skip to main content

In accordance with UC Berkeley campus policy, the Social Science Matrix offices are closed, and all our events will be presented online until further notice. Visit https://matrix.berkeley.edu/events for more information.

Berkeley Social Science

  • Research Streams
  • Events
  • Initiatives
  • Services & Support
  • Affiliated Centers
  • About
Berkeley

Research Streams

  • Matrix
  • Cities
  • Cognition
  • Complexity
  • COVID-19
  • Environment
  • Governance
  • Identities
  • Mortality
  • Risk
  • Stratification
  • Technology
See all Topics

Events

  • Past Events
  • Authors Meet Critics
  • Matrix on Point

Services & Support

  • Project & Grant Services
  • Matrix Funding

Initiatives

  • Matrix Research Teams
  • COVID-19: UC Berkeley Social Sciences Portal
  • Reimagining Democracy Town Hall Series

About

  • Contact
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Jobs
  • Team
  • Affiliated Centers
  • Matrix Space Usage Policy
  • Home
  • Research Streams
  • Matrix
  • Research Streams
Matrix

Video: How Do Communities Heal After an Incident of Sexual Violence?

Associated Channels

  • Matrix
  • Wellness
  • Identities
May 23, 2019 by Chuck Kapelke
 

How do we move forward after an incident of sexual violence or harassment involving members of our community? What does a trauma-informed community look like? Recorded on May 13, 2019, this video features a panel discussion addressing these and other questions, featuring representatives from different resource centers on the UC Berkeley campus.

Sexual violence occurs in our communities, and the last year has begun to demonstrate just how often. But what next? How do we move forward after an incident of sexual violence or harassment involving members of our community? Acknowledging the impact of an incident on not only the survivor but the community as a whole is essential to preventing retraumatization and future harmful behavior. How can communities address the traumatization of the survivor and those around them? What does a trauma-informed community look like?

Recorded on May 13, 2019, this video features a panel discussion featuring representatives from different resource centers on the UC Berkeley campus. The panel was presented as part of a Matrix Research Team entitled "Community Conversations on Sexual Violence and Harassment: Narratives of Activism, Inclusion, Confidentiality, Accountability, and Healing," led by the Special Faculty Advisor to the Chancellor on Sexual Violence/Sexual Harassment.

The panel was moderated by Rudolfo Mendoza-Denton, Richard and Rhoda Goldman Distinguished Professor of Psychology, UC Berkeley. Panelists included Kendra Fox-Davis, Complaint Resolution Officer, Office for the Prevention of Harassment and Discrimination, UC Berkeley; Tobirus Newby, Licensed Clinical Social Worker, UHS Social Services, UC Berkeley; Julie Shackford-Bradley, Coordinator and co-founder, Restorative Justice Center, UC Berkeley; and Liat Wexler, Prevention Manager for Staff and Faculty, PATH to Care Center, UC Berkeley.

Department

  • Psychology

Article Type

  • Matrix News
  Comments

Add a Comment

Filtered HTML

Plain text

Related Articles

  • March 14, 2021 by Chuck Kapelke

    Video: Authors Meet Critics: "Scammer's Yard: The Crime of Black Repair in Jamaica"

    A panel discussion on "Scammer's Yard" featuring Jovan Lewis, Nadia Ellis, and Deborah Thomas

  • October 25, 2020 by Chuck Kapelke

    2020 Citrin Center Award: Robert Putnam

    Robert D. Putnam, Malkin Research Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University, on his book, The Upswing: How America Came Together a Century Ago and How We Can Do It Again.

  • June 25, 2020 by Chuck Kapelke

    2020-2021 Matrix Research Teams Announced

    Data feminism, Asian cities, and community cooperation and police are among the topics to be explored by the seven new Matrix Research Teams selected for the 2020-2021 academic year.

Berkeley

Connect With Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Jobs
  • Terms of Use
Donate
Copyright ©2007 - 2025 | The Regents of the University of California
Berkeley