More than half of university students in Australia were sexually harassed last year and seven percent sexually assaulted on at least one occasion, a "disturbing" new national study revealed Tuesday.
The findings came in an Australian Human Rights Commission report, conducted on behalf of the country's 39 universities that questioned more than 30,000 students, after years of activism by women's groups to discover the extent of the problem.
Women were three times as likely as men to be sexually assaulted and almost twice as likely to be sexually harassed, either on-campus, traveling to and from the university or at off-campus events endorsed by the institution.
"The unavoidable conclusion of the data... is that incidents of sexual assault and sexual harassment are occurring at unacceptable rates at Australian universities," said Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins.
"While anybody can experience sexual assault or sexual harassment, it is clear from the data that women at university experience these behaviours at disproportionately higher rates than men.
"This adds weight to the body of evidence that highlights disturbing rates of sexual violence against women in Australia."
The report said almost a third of the harassment occurred on university grounds or in teaching spaces, while one in five of the assaults happened at a university or residence social event.
Australian universities, which have more than one million pupils enrolled, are hugely popular with international students, particularly from China and India.
Many of those affected -- including international students -- did not formally report the incident, with the vast majority saying their university did not do enough to provide clear direction on what to do and where to seek support.
"It broke my heart to read this report," Sophie Johnston, from the National Union of Students, told reporters. "This is a cultural battle we are fighting everywhere."
The report made nine recommendations, including the need to change attitudes and behaviour and to ensure an independent and systemic review of how universities respond.
Universities Australia, the body representing the country's university sector, immediately announced a 10-point plan to tackle the issue.
This included a 24/7 support line, new training for staff to recognise and deal with the problem, and a commitment to a follow-up survey to track progress.
"We send a strong and clear message today that these behaviours are not acceptable. Not on our campuses -- and not in Australian society," Universities Australia chair Margaret Gardner said.
"We have listened, and we will act."While the announcement was being made a cohort of students, some of whom had experienced sexual harassment or assault, protested outside about the culture of the ANU.
PHOTO: Some students put tape over their mouths to protest ANU's culture towards sexual harassment and assault. (ABC News: Dharshini Sundran)
Some students had tape over their mouths, which they said represented "survivors and survivor advocates who had been silenced by the university".
ANU announced earlier this month that students would have access to a full-time on-campus specialist sexual assault counsellor.
They also said yesterday that the university was expecting more sexual assault victims to come forwardafter the "shocking" and "ugly" picture of the problem at the ANU was revealed.
'One incident is too many'
A much smaller percentage of the University of Canberra (UC) student population participated in the voluntary survey.
The results from UC indicated a slightly lower rate of students being sexual assaulted in a university setting than their national counterparts, and a much lower rate than ANU students.
But 7.2 per cent of UC respondents said they had experienced sexual assault in their everyday lives over the past two years, compared to 6.9 per cent nationally.
Vice-chancellor Deep Saini said "one incident is one too many" and he "choked up" while reading some of the responses.
"The report shows that there is work to do and the results will help us inform how we can work harder to improve our education programs, our support services, policies and practices."
Professor Saini said he also wanted to improve the reporting rates for sexual offences.
"We're going to collectively try to shift the culture towards reporting," he said.
"The provision for reporting has always been there, but obviously students are not aware of that."
When releasing the results UC announced they had also appointed former sex discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick to review the culture within the university and the student body.
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