Examples of ways to support a friend who discoles a harmful experience are:
Listen and support
. Believe what you are listening. Give confidence or reassuring.
What is an example of coercive tactics?
Which of the following is an example of coercive tactics? A.
alcohol inhibits motor control
, making it difficult for someone to resist and/or leave a dangerous situation. Which of the following is the best way to respond if a friend tells you they were sexually assaulted?
What does trauma induced paralysis?
trauma induced paralysis.
Repeated, unwanted contact that communicates a threat or makes someone fearful
can be referred to as: stalking.
What is stalking best defined as?
Stalking is
unwanted and/or repeated surveillance by an individual or group toward another person
. Stalking behaviors are interrelated to harassment and intimidation and may include following the victim in person or monitoring them.
What is a pattern of unwanted contact that is repeated intimidating and causes someone to be fearful or suffer emotional distress?
Stalking
is best defined as: a pattern of unwanted contact that is repeated intimidating and/or causes someone to be fearful. Posting or sharing explicit photos of someone without that person’s permission is: Sexual harassment.
What are some examples of coercion?
These actions may include
extortion, blackmail, torture, threats to induce favors, or even sexual assault
. In law, coercion is codified as a duress crime.
Which of the following is an example of coercive?
It seeks to force or compel behavior rather than to influence behavior through persuasion. Examples of coercive power include
threats of write-ups, demotions, pay cuts, layoffs, and terminations if employees don’t follow
orders. In order to be effective, the manager must be able to follow through on the threat.
Can trauma Paralyse you?
Paralysis is the inability to move a part of the body and comes in different types. One may become paralyzed after a
spinal cord injury
(SCI) or trauma.
What is freezing up during a traumatic event?
Freezing is
fight-or-flight on hold
, where you further prepare to protect yourself. It’s also called reactive immobility or attentive immobility. It involves similar physiological changes, but instead, you stay completely still and get ready for the next move.
What happens in the freeze response?
The “freeze” response occurs
when our brains decide we cannot take on the threat nor are we able to escape
. Often when this happens our bodies might remain still, unable to move, numb or “freeze”. We may feel as if we are not actually a part of our bodies.
What is an example of stalking?
Examples of stalking behaviors:
Repeated, unwanted phone calls, texts, messages
, etc. that may or may not be threatening. Creating fake profiles to continue contacting a person after they have been blocked on their personal account. Observing, following or “coincidentally” showing up wherever the person goes.
What is the most common type of stalking?
Simple Obsessional
: This is the most common type of stalker. The stalker is usually a male and the focus of the stalking is an ex-wife, ex-lover or former boss. In intimate relationships, the stalking frequently starts before the break-up.
What defines harassment?
Harassment is
unwanted behaviour which you find offensive or which makes you feel intimidated or humiliated
. It can happen on its own or alongside other forms of discrimination. Unwanted behaviour could be: spoken or written words or abuse.
What is repeated unwanted contact?
What is
stalking
? “Stalking is a pattern of repeated and unwanted attention, harassment, contact, or any other course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to feel fear,” according to the Department of Justice.
What is Title IX and how does it fight discrimination?
The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) enforces, among other statutes, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Title IX
protects people from discrimination based on sex in education programs or activities that receive federal financial assistance
.
What exactly is molestation?
molestation. n.
the crime of sexual acts with children up to the age of 18
, including touching of private parts, exposure of genitalia, taking of pornographic pictures, rape, inducement of sexual acts with the molester or with other children and variations of these acts by pedophiles.