Jessica Ladd: The reporting system that sexual assault survivors want
ジェシカ・ラド: 性的暴行からのサバイバーが望む通報システムとは
Jessica Ladd is using technology to combat sexual assault, empower survivors and advance justice. Full bio
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楽しみにしていました
to get out of her parents' house,
that she belongs.
待ちきれませんでした
that she has a crush on.
with a pounding headache.
頭痛とともに目が覚めたのです
the night in flashes.
覚えておらず
outside Mike's room
吐いていたことと
while he was inside her,
無言で壁を見つめていたこと
家に帰ったこと
嫌な思い出にはなったものの
what sex in college is?"
こんなものかも?」とも思いました
will be sexually assaulted
5人に1人の女性、13人に1人の男性が
性的被害にあうとされています
in the United States.
their assault to their school
学校や警察に通報しますが
wait 11 months to make the report.
11ヶ月を要しています
with what happened on her own.
一人で対処できると思っていましたが
taking girls home from parties,
部屋へ連れて行くのを見て
who Mike did the exact same thing to.
5人のうちの1人であることを知りました
全くあり得ない話ではありません
repeat perpetrators will be reported,
通報されることなどほぼあり得ず
of assaults reported to the police
暴行の内の たった6%の
spending a single day in prison.
入ることになるのです
that they'll get away with it.
no deterrent to assault
これらの犯罪を抑止するものは
epidemiologist by training.
教育を受けました
our resources to do the most good.
活用できる場所です
but a solvable problem.
解決可能な問題と捉えています
started hitting the news a few years ago,
取り上げられるようになってきた頃
to make a change.
またとない機会だと感じました
to college survivors.
話し合いを始めました
in college is pretty simple;
とてもシンプルで―
at the time and place
必要な時に
about their reporting options,
明確に記載されて
report their assault,
信じてくれるかどうかもわからない
who may or may not believe them.
通報を済ませられるもの
a secure, timestamped document
証拠として
文書を作成する機能のあるもの
even if they don't want to report yet.
最も重要なのは
他の誰かが
reported the same assailant.
設定できる機能があることです
the only one changes everything.
知ることで すべてが変わるのです
you frame your own experience,
認識も変わりますし
you think about your perpetrator,
and they'll have yours.
彼らにはあなたがいるのです
that actually does this
ウェブサイトを作成し
稼動し始めました
組み込みました
had come forward,
entered into the matching system
マッチングシステムに進み
had done the same thing
数ヵ月後に
of both survivors
認証済みの連絡先が
to the authorities at the same time
取調べと追跡調査のため
for Hannah and her peers,
ハンナと同級生のためにあったとしたら
that they would have reported,
kicked off campus,
gotten the help that he needed.
彼に必要な援助を受けていたでしょう
repeat offenders like Mike
following a match,
止める事ができていたとしたら
would never even be assaulted
そもそも初めから被害に
59 percent of sexual assaults
59%もの性的暴行を
repeat perpetrators earlier on.
a real deterrent to assault,
有効な抑止力を作り出したことで
would never even try to assault anyone.
暴行しようとはしないでしょう
to information for you
あなたの情報を保管し
conditions are met,
is for college campuses.
大学のキャンパス用ですが
could be used in the military
軍隊や職場でも
get away with it.
生きなくても良いのです
are held accountable,
and justice they deserve,
get the information they need,
of another human being.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jessica Ladd - Founder and CEO, CallistoJessica Ladd is using technology to combat sexual assault, empower survivors and advance justice.
Why you should listen
Jessica Ladd is the founder and CEO of Callisto, formerly Sexual Health Innovations, and a TED Fellow. She has been honored as a fearless changemaker by the Case Foundation, an emerging innovator by Ashoka and American Express, and as the Civic Hacker of the Year by Baltimore Innovation Week.
Before founding Sexual Health Innovations, Ladd worked in the White House Office of National AIDS Policy as a public policy associate at The AIDS Institute and as a sexual health educator and researcher for a variety of organizations. She also founded The Social Innovation Lab in Baltimore and a chapter of FemSex at Pomona College. She received her Masters in Public Health at Johns Hopkins and her BA in Public Policy/Human Sexuality at Pomona College. She left a PhD program in infectious disease epidemiology at Johns Hopkins in order to pursue work at Sexual Health Innovations full-time.
Ladd has created a platform, Callisto, for survivors of sexual assault to electronically document and report what happened to them. The platform helps identify serial sexual offenders, allowing victims to either (1) directly report to an institution or (2) store their identity in escrow and only release it to an institution if another victim names the same assailant.
Jessica Ladd | Speaker | TED.com