User:John Foubert

John D. Foubert, Ph.D. earned his B.A. in Psychology from the College of William and Mary, his M.A. in Psychology from the University of Richmond, and his Ph.D. in College Student Personnel Administration from the University of Maryland, College Park. Dr. Foubert is National President of One in Four, Professor of Higher Education and Student Affairs at Oklahoma State University, and Principal of John D. Foubert, LLC Consulting.

Dr. Foubert is the author of nine books including: The Men’s and Women’s Programs: Ending Rape through Peer Education and Lessons Learned: How to avoid the biggest mistakes made by college resident assistants. His several dozen peer reviewed journal articles focus on ending sexual violence, the harms of pornography, and college student development.

As part of his $505,365 in external funding, he served as Principal Investigator for a $275,000 U.S. Department of Education grant. In this project, he found that a sexual assault prevention program he authored is the only program ever shown to lead to a lasting decline in sexual assault behavior among high risk college men who saw a program relative to a control group. His current scholarship focuses on the connections between pornography and bystander intervention.

Dr. Foubert’s scholarship has been published in a wide variety of high impact journals including Violence Against Women, the Journal of College Student Development, The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, the Journal of American College Health, and the Journal of Community Psychology. Dr. Foubert is the recipient of several national awards for his scholarship and service, including the Annuit Coeptis Senior Professional Award from the American College Personnel Association.

Dr. Foubert appears in the media frequently on CNN, C-SPAN, NPR, The New York Times, The Houston Chronicle, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and Time Magazine. He is a blogger for the Huffington Post. He is currently writing his 10th book, tentatively titled "How it Harms: The Effects of Today's Pornography."