A grant from the U.S. Department of Justice will enable the University of Maine to better coordinate its response to crimes against women on campus and strengthen awareness and prevention programs. Funded by a two-year $302,256 grant from the Justice Department\u27s Violence Against Women Office, the Safe Campus Project will work to develop stronger collaboration among campus and community resources to improve the efficiency of continuing education and prevention, as well as advocacy for victims of sexual assault, domestic violence and stalking
The Maine Perspective, a publication for the University of Maine, was a campus newsletter produced b...
A record number of student awards, the HAL lab and new faculty spotlights. Featured stories include:...
Two letters to the editor of the Maine Campus expressing opinions about proposes Safe Zone, on-campu...
The University of Maine System Rural Health and Well-being Grand Challenge Initiative\u27s Injury Pr...
One in four undergraduate women are sexually assaulted in college. While perpetrators rarely serve ...
Tritons United Against Gender-based Violence is a programming grant funded by the Department of Just...
Health and Counseling Services will use the three-year Department of Justice grant to create the Off...
The University of Maine has been named an official site of the National Writing Project. The designa...
Screenshot of UMaine in the News regarding the Portland Press Herald report that the University of M...
A $10,000 grant from the Nellie Mae Fund for Education to the University of Maine Upward Bound progr...
UMaine Today magazine, published twice a year by the University of Maine Division of Marketing and C...
Full tuition is available for four graduate-level, special education courses to be offered by the Un...
Inside UMaine was the employee newsletter issued starting in 2005. The newsletter was published once...
In light of recent incidents, the university community must look out for itself more and become awar...
Josefina G. Carbonell, assistant secretary for Aging in the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services,...
The Maine Perspective, a publication for the University of Maine, was a campus newsletter produced b...
A record number of student awards, the HAL lab and new faculty spotlights. Featured stories include:...
Two letters to the editor of the Maine Campus expressing opinions about proposes Safe Zone, on-campu...
The University of Maine System Rural Health and Well-being Grand Challenge Initiative\u27s Injury Pr...
One in four undergraduate women are sexually assaulted in college. While perpetrators rarely serve ...
Tritons United Against Gender-based Violence is a programming grant funded by the Department of Just...
Health and Counseling Services will use the three-year Department of Justice grant to create the Off...
The University of Maine has been named an official site of the National Writing Project. The designa...
Screenshot of UMaine in the News regarding the Portland Press Herald report that the University of M...
A $10,000 grant from the Nellie Mae Fund for Education to the University of Maine Upward Bound progr...
UMaine Today magazine, published twice a year by the University of Maine Division of Marketing and C...
Full tuition is available for four graduate-level, special education courses to be offered by the Un...
Inside UMaine was the employee newsletter issued starting in 2005. The newsletter was published once...
In light of recent incidents, the university community must look out for itself more and become awar...
Josefina G. Carbonell, assistant secretary for Aging in the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services,...
The Maine Perspective, a publication for the University of Maine, was a campus newsletter produced b...
A record number of student awards, the HAL lab and new faculty spotlights. Featured stories include:...
Two letters to the editor of the Maine Campus expressing opinions about proposes Safe Zone, on-campu...