Interpersonal Violence

IPV header
Scope

National Data

According to the 2019 Campus Climate Survey on Sexual Assault and Misconduct1, 1 in 4 college women experience sexual assault or misconduct while pursuing their undergraduate degree.

In 2019, 26.4% of women and 6.8% of men reported rape or sexual assault through physical force, violence, or incapacitation (among all undergraduate students).

 Women ages 18 to 24 are 3 times more likely to experience sexual violence than women of any other age group.

Missouri Data

Over 30% of Missouri college students report experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV) in their lifetime, and 14% report IPV in the last 12 months.

The most common form of abuse students reports experiencing in the past 12 months include*:

Emotional/Psychological/Mental AbuseVerbal AbuseSexual Abuse
11%8.1%2.7%

1 in 4 (25%) Missouri college students report experiencing non-consensual sexual contact (NCSC) in their lifetime, and 4.8% report NCSC in the past 12 months. Most instances of NCSC occurred off-campus.

92% of students report that they would want a peer to intervene if they themselves where in danger or being harmed by someone else.

Students report the resources they are most likely to utilize in situations involving bystander intervention include*:

Friends/PeersFamily/Spouse/PartnerHealth/Wellness/Counseling Center
75%51%42%

*question is select all that apply. All Missouri student data comes from the 2025 Missouri Assessment of College Health Behaviors.

Population Considerations

 23%  of TGQN (transgender, genderqueer, nonconforming) undergraduate college students report nonconsensual sexual contact, compared to 26% of non-TGQN women, and 6.8% of non-TGQN men.1

LGB+ women are significantly more likely than straight women to have ever experienced IPV in their lifetime, reported by 61% of bisexual women and 44% of lesbian women compared to 35% of straight women.2

More than 40% of Black women experience physical violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime compared to 31.5% of all women.4

Younger people face the highest risk of sexual violence – 69% of sexual assault victims are between the ages of 12-34.3

Indigenous Americans are at greatest risk for sexual violence and there are an estimated 5,900 sexual assaults against Indigenous Americans annually.3

Survivors of domestic and sexual violence are more likely to meet criteria for and/or develop symptoms for PTSD, anxiety, depression, substance use disorders, self-harm, and suicide. 3

Data Briefs

At a Glance

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Best Practices

The CDC has comprehensive resources on Violence Prevention and their newest resource is Stop SV: A Technical Package to Prevent Sexual Violence. There is also a landing page with various Tools and Trainings from Veto Violence.

Culture of Respect has a good resource outlining various online, performance-based, and mixed method sexual assault prevention programs

The NCAA released a document on Sexual Violence Prevention: An Athletics Tool Kit for a Healthy and Safe Culture

The National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC) has great resources for advocates and educators.

Bystander Intervention Programs

Healthy Relationship Programs

  • Safe Dates is a dating abuse-prevention program geared towards middle and high school students, but could be adapted for college age individuals
  • The One Love Foundation is a non-profit with the goal of ending relationship abuse.

Men’s Work in Prevention

National and Missouri Resources

Missouri Resources

The Complex Relationship Between Alcohol and Interpersonal Violence

Inclusion of a particular resource is not an official endorsement from Partners in Prevention or any of our funding sources.

PIP Resources

Engage Multi-Level Violence Prevention Program

Engage is a multi-level violence prevention program designed to address situations of harm involving alcohol and other drugs, bias and discrimination, interpersonal violence, mental health and well-being, and hazing.

Components of Engage include a self-paced, online introductory training, in-person facilitated discussions delivered by trained facilitators, and community-level violence prevention efforts including social norms campaigns and other programming. Visit our Engage page to learn more!

Educational Materials

PIP has developed social media playbooks, Programs to Go presentations, and other resources to assist campuses in preventing interpersonal violencec. Email our staff at pip@missouri.edu to access resources.

Title IX, Clery Act, and Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) Resources

Title IX/Clery Resources

Partners in Prevention considers Title IX compliance vital to the health and safety of all students. In an effort to help all campuses understand what is required of them, PIP has collected resources, guides and tools that you can access below. Resources on this page can be used by campuses as guidance towards full understanding of Title IX, the Clery Act, the Campus SaVE Act and VAWA.

Articles Tying Alcohol Prevention to Sexual Violence Prevention 

Department of Justice Special Report: Campus Law Enforcement, 2011-12 

Sexual Violence and Alcohol Policies

The Role of Alcohol Policies in Preventing Intimate Partner Violence: A Review of the Literature

Title IX, Clery Act, Campus SaVE Act and VAWA Explained 

US Department of Education Summarizes Final VAWA Regulations

Resources for Title IX Coordinators

Campus SaVE Act

VAWA (Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013)

Action Items for Your Campus to Consider 

Federal Register | Violence Against Women Act

The Obama Administration today announced publication of the final rule implementing changes made to the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (Clery Act) by the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013 (VAWA). That law and the new rule strengthen the Clery Act to more effectively address, and ultimately reduce, sexual violence on college campuses, including, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking.

Although the final rule will not go into effect on July 1, 2015, the Department reminded institutions that the VAWA statutory provisions are in effect now and institutions are expected to make a good faith effort to comply with those requirements.

  1. https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2014/10/20/2014-24284/violence-against-women-act

Senator Claire McCaskill’s Campus Sexual Assault Survey results

Senator Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) released the anticipated results of her campus sexual assault survey in a report titled, “Sexual Violence on Campus: How Too Many Institutions of Higher Education are Failing to Protect Students.”

After surveying a national sample of 440 four-year institutions of higher education, Sen. McCaskill has detailed a number of shortcomings she believes “affect nearly every stage of the institutions’ responses to sexual violence” and demonstrate that “many institutions are failing to comply with the law and best practices in how they handle sexual violence among students.” The following points are highlighted in the report’s executive summary as key findings from the survey:

  • Lack of Knowledge About the Scope of the Problem.
  • Failure to Encourage Reporting of Sexual Violence.
  • Lack of Adequate Sexual Assault Training.
  • Reported Sexual Violence Goes Uninvestigated.
  • Lack of Adequate Services for Survivors.
  • Lack of Trained, Coordinated Law Enforcement.
  • Adjudication Fails to Comply with Requirements and Best Practices.
  • Lack of Coordinated Oversight.

Important note: The appendix of the report includes a detailed breakdown of every survey question, which includes how the respondents answered according to institutional type (large, small, public, private, NCAA division, etc.).


NASPA looks at what Senator McCaskill’s report contains and what it means for your campus

Climate Surveys: Useful Tools to Help Colleges and Universities in Their Efforts to Reduce and Prevent Sexual Assault

Technical Assistance Guide and Resource Kit for Primary Prevention and Evaluation

Beyond Title IX: Guidelines for Preventing and Responding to Gender-based Violence in Higher Education

Q&A on Title IX and Sexual Violence from the United States Department of Education and the Office for Civil Rights

White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault Report (April 2014)

Examples from Other Campuses 


News Articles, Peer-Reviewed Literature and Other Important Information 

Helping to Protect Students from Sexual AssaultThe Center for Changing Our Campus Culture

  • The U.S. Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) announced the launch of The Center for Changing Our Campus Culture (www.changingourcampus.org), a new comprehensive online clearinghouse on sexual assault, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking on campus. This new website provides the latest information, materials and resources for campus administrators, faculty and staff, as well as campus and community law enforcement, victim service providers, students, parents and other key stakeholders to use to improve campus safety.

DOJ Launches Website To Advise Colleges On Sexual Assault

Practitioner’s Discussion of Implementing Clery/Title IX

  • In August 2014, a summit was held to bring together campus officials from around the U.S. to discuss unresolved issues around Title IX and other related legislation, including the Clery Act and the Violence Against Women Act. During the summit, campus police, administrators, deans of students, Title IX and Clery Act staff, and others met to work toward better compliance. Following the summit, a list of issues and promising practices was created. To access this resource, click here.

Title IX: The Final Rule

Following the release of the Final Rule under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, clarifying documents have also been released by the Department of Education. Those documents include (1) and Executive Order (14021, issued March 8, 2021) and (2) Questions and Answers on the Title IX Regulations on Sexual Harassment (issued July 20, 2021). The U.S. Department of Education has released its Final Rule under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in education programs or activities receiving federal financial assistance. The Department of Education has also released other documents including a fact sheet, overview, and document detailing major provisions. See below for relevant resources and articles on the Final Rule. 

Citations
  1. Association of American Universities 2019 Campus Climate Survey Report. Prepared by: Westat, An Employee-Owned Research Corporation® 1600 Research Boulevard Rockville, Maryland 20850-3129, https://www.aau.edu/key-issues/campus-climate-and-safety/aau-campus-climate-survey-2019
  2. HRC Foundation. “Understanding Intimate Partner Violence in the LGBTQ+ Community.” Human Rights Campaign, 2022, www.hrc.org/resources/understanding-intimate-partner-violence-in-the-lgbtq-community.
  3. Coursey, Michael. “Statistics: Victims of Sexual Violence.” RAINN, 16 June 2025, rainn.org/facts-statistics-the-scope-of-the-problem/statistics-victims-of-sexual-violence/. Accessed 31 Oct. 2025.
  4. The Status of Black Women in the United States: Executive Summary. Institute for Women’s Policy Research. https://iwpr.org/the-status-of-black-women-in-the-united-states/