Metadata
Title
Sexual misconduct, bullying, harassment, and discrimination support
Category
international
UUID
364ffaa95d094480b1ae13be4225e0af
Source URL
https://about.uq.edu.au/safety-and-security/sexual-misconduct-bullying-harassmen...
Parent URL
https://about.uq.edu.au/faculties-institutes/bel/about/contact
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T06:10:10+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Sexual misconduct, bullying, harassment, and discrimination support

Source: https://about.uq.edu.au/safety-and-security/sexual-misconduct-bullying-harassment-discrimination-support Parent: https://about.uq.edu.au/faculties-institutes/bel/about/contact

UQ Safer Communities provides support for students, staff and the UQ community.

Emergency support

Get support 24/7

Experiences of sexual misconduct, bullying, harassment or discrimination can be distressing and overwhelming. You don’t need to have all the answers, and you don’t need to know what to do next. Our specialist UQ Safer Communities team is here to listen and help.

Quick exit

Contact UQ Safer Communities

Learn more about reporting an incident to UQ Safer Communities

Additional support

Our support services

UQ Safer Communities provides confidential, compassionate support to students, staff and members of the broader UQ community relating to inappropriate, concerning or threatening behaviour.

Incidents may be recent or historical and may have occurred at UQ or in non-UQ settings, in Australia or overseas.

We provide person-centred support, prioritising your safety, wellbeing and choice, including:

Quick exit

How you can help

If someone shares an experience of gender-based violence or other inappropriate behaviour with you, how you respond matters. You don’t need to be an expert to help.

Listen

Show you are listening by giving them your full attention, nodding occasionally to show support and understanding and encouraging the speaker with small verbal supports such as 'yes' and 'I understand'. Be non-judgemental when you respond. Avoid interrupting, asking 'why' questions, or talking about your own experiences.

Support

Acknowledge the person’s experience and the difficulty they may have faced in disclosing it. Thank them for telling you and check that they are safe. Phrases like, 'I’m here with you' or 'Thank you for telling me' help show support for the person without pressuring them to speak further about the details of what happened.

Refer

The best thing you can do is to outline the support services that are available to them so that they can make their own decision about their next steps. It’s important you don’t provide a person with misleading advice and instead, put them in touch with experts who can help them.

You can refer them to UQ Safer Communities for support, or for advice about next steps.

External support organisations

Free, confidential support is also available 24/7 through external services across Australia, including:

Details of other organisations and agencies are included on the Queensland Government website.

The UQ Safer Communities team can also support you to reach out to these organisations.