Union University
Education
A study showing significant improvement in attitudes and bystander intervention by male soldiers, relative to a control group.
Study showing significant behavior change resulting from a rape prevention program -- a 40% decline in rape among fraternity men seeing The Men's Program. Also found that fraternity men are 3 times more likely to rape than other men.
This document describes the work I can do as an expert witness.
College women’s exposure to pornography is growing nationwide. A limited amount of re-search exists documenting the negative effects of pornography on women’s attitudes and be-havior related to sexual assault. The present study surveyed... more
- by John Foubert
Use of pornography is common among adolescents and young adults, with most men and a growing number of women viewing regularly. A vast body of research suggests pornography use is associated with multiple attitudinal and behavioral... more
- by John Foubert
Students at a midsized public university in the southeast completed the Student Development Task and Lifestyle Inventory at the beginning of their first year, beginning of their sophomore year, and end of their senior year. More involved... more
- by John Foubert
Noncommissioned male officers in the U.S. Army stationed in Germany were trained to present a 1-hour rape prevention workshop—The Men’s Program—to 237 enlisted male soldiers. A comparison group of 244 male soldiers received a briefing... more
- by John Foubert
African American, Latino, and Asian first-yearcollege men (36) saw The Men’s Program, an all-male rapeprevention workshop, and wrote answers to four open-ended questions to determine how men from non-whitegroups react to a commonly used... more
- by John Foubert
This qualitative study examined the impact of an all-male rape prevention program on fraternity men. Seven months after participating in “The Men’s Program,”fraternity men were asked whether during the previous year the program impacted... more
- by John Foubert