Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-18-2026

Journal / Book Title

Youth

Abstract

Depression, although a consequence of sexual violence, has not been studied in the context of college students’ views of campus sexual violence climate. Depression is one of the most prevalent and impairing mental health concerns among college students and has well-established links to sexual violence victimization; therefore, it serves as a theoretically and clinically meaningful focal outcome. Therefore, we assessed perceptions of institutional climate in the context of self-reported depression. Undergraduates (n = 716) reported perceptions and experiences of campus sexual violence and misconduct, connectedness, attitude, and depressive symptoms in an online survey. More than a third of participants reported elevated depressive symptoms. This was associated with campus connectedness and attitude, perceived campus climate, and personally experiencing rape, assault, or harassment. In a multivariate model, only the perceived climate variables did not retain significance. Elevated depressive symptoms were associated with connectedness and attitude towards the university and experiencing sexual harassment/assault. Understanding and explicitly addressing these connections may be beneficial for the effectiveness of campus prevention and intervention.

DOI

10.3390/youth6010038

Rights

This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.

Published Citation

Navarro Silvera, S. A., Birnbaum, A. S., Goldfarb, E. S., Mainali, R., & Lieberman, L. D. (2026). Depressive Symptoms, Campus Connectedness, and Campus Climate Related to Sexual Violence and Misconduct. Youth, 6(1), 38. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth6010038

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