Education | Prevention | Advocacy | Support

Jane Doe No More was founded in 2007 on a simple principle: By giving survivors of sexual violence a name, a face, a voice, and a platform, society would begin to understand that anyone can be a victim of this horrific crime. Through education, awareness, advocacy and support programs, Jane Doe No More is helping prevent sexual crimes, and encouraging and empowering survivors to end their silence. Together we are breaking social stigmas, and improving the way society responds to victims. We look forward to collaborating with you!

All Jane Doe No More programs are at no cost to participants.

Survivors Speak™

Empowering survivors to share their stories through specialized professional training in public speaking and team building, allowing them to advance their own healing while helping to educate audiences of all kinds.

Jane Doe No More has brought me acceptance, courage, and a sense of belonging. I can take something so dark and use it to shine a light on the way towards healing.
— Debbie Mitchell, Survivors Speak Outreach Team

Community Outreach and Advocacy

Engaging individuals in the community, in the legislature, at businesses, corporations and organizations to work together to create real and meaningful change.

We all have a role to play…remember this is personal, there is no such thing as ‘not in my neighborhood.’ Sexual crimes affect us all; our mothers, our fathers, our sisters, our brothers, our friends, our co-workers and our children.
— Donna Palomba, Founder and President, Jane Doe No More

Safe Student Initiative™

Educating students from middle school to college through age-appropriate, survivor-led interactive programs including safe and unsafe touch, sexual respect, healthy relationships, consent, bystander intervention and rape culture.

The presentations went great! The speakers kept the student’ attention and were well informed and honest with students. I thought it was a nice balance of information and real-life situations. I really liked how the speakers engaged the students and asked them questions.
— Alyssa Giedra, School Counselor, Wolcott High School

Escape Alive Survival Skills®

Training women and girls to stay safe physically, emotionally and intellectually through personal prevention strategies, confidence-building skills, awareness tips, and kick, strike and blow techniques.

I am still talking and bragging about the class! I am telling everyone what I learned, and insisting that all the woman and young girls take the class. I cannot begin to express that my expectations were not only met, but the class exceeded anything I could’ve imagined. The feeling of strength and empowerment that I left with was something that I had never experienced. 
— Lisa M, Bristol, CT
Duty Trumps Doubt cover  with Cine logo

Duty Trumps Doubt™

Changing perspectives through our trauma-informed video and survivor-led presentations specifically designed to help law enforcement, medical personnel, legal professionals and society as a whole, to better understand victims of sexual crimes.

The Duty Trumps Doubt presentation is something we really need. Continuous training is huge! We have younger and younger detectives who have not had this type of training. The video quote about law enforcement only having ‘one shot at a crime scene’ couldn’t be more true. Barb (Jenkins) spoke well and had a great message; it was different than we have ever had. If just one person got something new out of this presentation, it was well worth the effort. We need more training like this more often.
— Sergeant Jason Hyland, UConn Police Department START Team
Tracey B, Donna and 2 Farmington officers
Sexual Harassment words

Sexual Harassment Prevention Training

In-person, interactive training including role play for employers and employees to help ensure a healthy and safe work environment, free of sexual harassment. Training covers state policies and reporting procedures that fulfill training mandated by CT state law.

Sexual Harrassment Prevention Instructors
I thought it was a great idea to get everyone together for in-person training instead of having to complete the training online which is boring. Also the videos are great because they are up to date and show real concerns anyone can have at work.
— Don Jenkins, Manager, The Back Nine Tavern, New Britain
Physical harassment at work