Publication Date

12-30-2025

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Canadian Journal of Higher Education

Volume

55

Issue

4

DOI

10.47678/CJHE.V55I4.190629

First Page

131

Last Page

147

Abstract

Gender-based and sexual violence (GBSV) remains a pervasive problem in higher education, disproportionately affecting marginalized students and undermining their safety, well-being, and academic success. Post-secondary institutions (PSIs) increasingly rely on peer educators (PeerEds) to deliver prevention and response programs, leveraging their shared student experience to foster trust and engagement. This study explores the motivations and experiences of GBSV PeerEds in Canada and the United States, revealing how personal trauma, institutional critique, and allyship drive their involvement. Findings highlight the emotional labour, secondary trauma, and systemic constraints PeerEds face, alongside their contributions to campus culture and advocacy. The study critiques institutional reliance on marginalized students' compassion and calls for trauma-informed practices, sustainable funding, and structural reform. Future research should examine PeerEds' influence on campus subcultures, administrators' complicity, and the broader legitimacy of peer-led GBSV initiatives. Meaningful change requires confronting institutional complicity and reimagining ethics of care.

Keywords

campus safety, enseignement supérieur, gender-based sexual violence, higher education, institutional accountability, pairs éducateurs, peer educators, pratiques tenant compte des traumatismes, respons abilité institutionnelle, sécurité sur les campus, trauma-informed practices, Violence sexuelle fondée sur le genre

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

Department

Counselor Education

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