Daily Mail

Now most universiti­es give classes on ‘sexual consent’

Drive to combat campus harassment intensifie­s

- Daily Mail Reporter

STUDENTS at almost two thirds of universiti­es are being offered ‘consent workshops’, according to an official report.

Universiti­es UK, which represents vice chancellor­s, said that the change had come because of pressure to tackle harassment.

It surveyed 100 institutio­ns on how they were dealing with harassment and found that major universiti­es including Oxford, Edinburgh and Durham were running ‘consent training’ for freshers.

The students are taught how to establish that a sexual encounter is consensual, how to ask for consent and how to recognise circumstan­ces where consent cannot be given.

Some universiti­es made the workshops a compulsory part of freshers’ week.

Since 2016, eight in ten universiti­es have updated their disciplina­ry policies and more than half have added to the rules students must follow.

Students at Edinburgh University are offered classes for those who have experience­d domestic or sexual abuse, as well as a workshop called ‘How to be good in bed’.

Universiti­es have come under fire for failing to protect students after a surge in allegation­s of sexual harassment.

A BBC report found that incidents of rape, sexual assault and harassment had more than trebled last year compared with 2016.

However improvemen­ts in how students can report such incidents may account for some of the rise. The report, Changing the Culture, found that universiti­es were not doing enough to stop hate incidents including those in which offence was caused by mistake.

It said there had been a steep rise in student complaints over harassment in the past few years.

And it said while there had been progress in dealing with sexual misconduct claims, more needed to be done on other harassment, such as hate crimes and incidents.

The report says a hate incident should still be dealt with seriously at a senior level even if no law has been broken and the perpetrato­r offended someone by mistake.

It says a hate incident can also be described as a ‘micro-aggression’, which is ‘an instance of indirect, subtle, or unintentio­nal discrimina­tion’. In response to the report, universiti­es minister Chris Skidmore warned vice chancellor­s that there must be a ‘zero-tolerance culture’ to all types of harassment.

He said: ‘Any form of harassment, violence or hate crime is abhorrent and unacceptab­le.’

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