Browse Items (246 total)

Midd Too Event Pictures.pdf
SRR started the #MiddToo movement in 2018 to draw attention to the ways in which Middlebury’s campus culture is complicit in sexual assault and to support survivors. This document includes photos from a #MiddToo tabling event in which students were…

#MiddToo Poster and Statement.pdf
As the global #MeToo movement (started in 2017) continued to grow, SRR created a #MiddToo movement (started in 2018) to recognize the ways in which Middlebury campus culture is complicit in sexual assault and to support survivors. This document…

IHH member Emily Pedowitz writes an op-ed encouraging Middlebury students to submit their stories related to sexual assault to be read at the group's storytelling event.

The four student organizers of IHH respond to criticisms that their advertising and storytelling event can be "triggering" by emphasizing the importance of allowing survivors to process trauma in their own ways.

A male student writes an opinion piece about struggling with his own role in rape culture after attending an IHH event and how the community must engage in hard conversations about changing behavior.

Ahead of the upcoming third annual IHH storytelling event, The Campus interviewed co-founder Luke Carroll Brown, who spoke about hoping to reduce the stigma around sexual violence. Two other students speak to the importance of the event.

The first iteration of The Map Project went on display in Davis Library in February of 2013.

The Campus article describes the third annual IHH storytelling event in the winter of 2014 and its general success.

Five Middlebury students and two faculty members were invited to represent IHH at a White House event on Teen Dating Violence.

IHH members spoke to The Campus about their plans for The Map Project after they began accepting submissions in the fall of 2012.
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