Publications by authors named "Manon Bergeron"

Article Synopsis
  • It analyzes data from a large group of students (1,464 total) and finds that these responses do not significantly vary based on gender or sexual minority status.
  • Among 327 gender and sexual minority participants, it shows that negative responses (like turning against the victim) and supportive responses are connected to increased trauma symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Some studies report that the sport context increases the risk of exposure to sexual violence for athletes. In contrast, others indicate a protective effect of sport participation against sexual violence, particularly among varsity athletes. Studies of sexual violence towards varsity athletes are limited by their failure to include control groups and various known risk factors such as age, graduate level, gender and sexual identity, disability status, international and Indigenous student status, and childhood sexual abuse.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • University-based sexual violence is a critical issue, particularly affecting Indigenous students who face higher levels of sexual harassment compared to their non-Indigenous peers.
  • A large-scale study involving 5,627 undergraduate students across six Canadian universities assessed their experiences and consequences of this violence.
  • The research indicates that while Indigenous students report more harassment, the overall contexts of sexual violence are similar for both groups, suggesting a need for tailored policies that promote cultural safety on campuses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Québec university communities are facing intensified pressure to address the incidence of sexual violence on campus. The ESSIMU () survey (2016) revealed that one third of respondents (students and employees from six universities, all genders combined) reported having experienced at least one form of sexual violence since arriving at university, committed by someone affiliated with the same university. As the issue is becoming increasingly institutionalized, a process that often erodes activism, this article highlights the role feminist activism has played in placing sexual violence on university campuses on the political agenda.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Experiencing sexual violence is an important risk factor for trauma symptoms, and these symptoms significantly impair psychosocial functioning. Sexual and gender minority university students are more likely than their heterosexual and cisgender peers to experience sexual violence (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Sexual violence is a pervasive problem on university campuses. Although previous work has documented greater vulnerability for sexual violence among sexual and gender minority students, little is known about contextual variation in vulnerability to this kind of violence. The goals of the current study were (1) to identify vulnerability among sexual and gender minority students with regard to sexual violence, and (2) to explore if the context of this violence differs across sexual and gender minority status.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study evaluates the effects of a group intervention for women sexually abused in childhood or adulthood. The sample consisted of 41 women involved in a group intervention based on a feminist approach offered by help centers for sexual assault victims in Quebec and 11 women in a wait-list comparison group. Results reveal that the group intervention reduced psychological distress and consequences associated with sexual abuse and that gains were maintained at three-month follow- up.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The present study evaluates a group intervention using a feminist approach for women experiencing sexual abuse in childhood or adulthood in order to measure changes associated with participation in a group intervention and verifies whether effects are maintained over time. The present study relates effects of the group intervention in terms of psychological distress, depression symptoms, post-traumatic stress symptoms and feelings of guilt and helplessness.

Method: The sample consists of 26 women participating in a group intervention offered by sexual assault centers in Quebec (CALACS - Centre d'aide et de lutte contre les agressions à caractère sexuel).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF