According to Jenica A. Asadorian and colleagues, since female students were “more likely to experience unwanted sex… than are male students,” our focus is at female students of college age at a public University. Because there are between thirty and forty different public institutions in Texas alone, we will focused our study on several specific public Universities. Because of their high student population and high traffic throughout the campus, the three target Universities are Texas Tech, University of Texas, and University of Texas at Arlington (Asadorian et al., …show more content…
Fisher and colleagues, there are a handful of assessed risk factors that come with campus rape. These risk factors include prior victimization to college, substance use of alcohol and drugs, age and the year of study in college, race and ethnicity of victim, the residential status of the victim, sorority membership, dating violence history of the victim, consensual sexual experiences, and attitudinal characteristics of both the victim and the perpetrator. Substance abuse can play a large part in the raping of females on campus because it impairs their ability to resist, fight back, or call for help. But according to this final report on campus sexual assault, women of different ethnic backgrounds and/or of the lower classmen classification were more at risk for rape on campus. In terms of the residential status of the victim, those living in a sorority house and members of sororities were more likely to be coerced with drugs and alcohol, and therefore under more risk for victimization of rape. Protective factors for the college women in these communities may include their campus’ intervention and advocate programs, such as assistance from their campus health clinic, bystander intervention programs, and emotional and psychological assistance through some form of counseling on campus. Even the communities of these college campuses coming together to raise awareness of the problem of rape, and