Karla Roman

Communications Director at The Every Voice Coalition

Karla Roman has a diverse work experience. Karla started as a Retail Intern at Foot Locker in 2019. In 2021 and 2022, they worked as a Legal Support Fellow at the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area (IIBA), supporting Spanish-speaking u visa clients with their petitions. Karla also worked as an HSF Scholar at the Hispanic Scholarship Fund in 2020. Karla then joined Stanford University in 2021, where they served as a Research Assistant at the Starck Lab and the Language and Cognition Lab. At Stanford, they also held the position of a Structured Liberal Education Community Coordinator, advising first-year students on their humanities essays. Most recently, in 2023, Karla worked at The Every Voice Coalition as a Communications Intern and then quickly progressed to become the Creative Director and, subsequently, the Communications Director.

Karla Roman obtained a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from Stanford University between 2020 and 2024. Karla also obtained the certification for IRB Nonmedical Research (All Nonmedical Investigators and Staff) from CITI Program in January 2022.

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Stanford, United States

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The Every Voice Coalition

Who We Are: We are a student and young alum led non-profit bringing together students, community organizations and universities to combat campus sexual violence by empowering survivors and students to write, file, and fight for their own protections and support into law. Currently on the ground in 14 states and Washington D.C., we've successfully passed our student-written bills into law in 6 states and are looking to continue to build our advocacy across the country. What We Do: Sexual violence policies must reflect the real experiences of students on campus, and the movement must be led by students. Our legislation is written by students, and students lead our coalition, from campus organizing to legislative advocacy. For 30 years, researchers have documented epidemic levels of sexual violence on our college campuses. Incidence rates are even higher for students with marginalized identities. While no one policy can end campus sexual violence, there are proven measures that reduce incidence rates and support survivors. The Every Voice legislation filed across the country encompasses a set of basic protections that all students should have access to: • Free medical and legal support services through Memorandums of Understanding between universities and rape crisis centers • Amnesty policies that prevent survivors from being punished for breaking school code of conduct at the time of an incident, such as alcohol or drug use • Confidential advising services to make clear survivors’ rights and options • Public data on sexual violence to increase transparency, measure progress, and improve policy • Universal, evidence-based annual prevention and response training for all students and employees


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