Are You Being Stalked?

Return to
  > About Title IX

Our Gender-Based Misconduct and Title IX Policy provides you with detailed information about your rights as a victim of stalking, your options for reporting, and resources available to you.

You can also quickly get helpful phone numbers by selecting the campus you attend.


What is Stalking?

Stalking is a series of actions that make the victim feel afraid and in danger. Stalking usually escalates over time and is often violent, therefore, you must take stalking seriously.

Stalking can be defined as a pattern of repeated and unwanted attention, harassment, contact, or any other course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to feel fear. Persons aged 18–24 years of age experience the highest rate of stalking. One in six women and one in nineteen men in the United States have experienced stalking during their lifetime.

Examples of stalking can include:

What Should I Do To Stay Safe?

How Am I Going To Feel?

Getting Support

Stalking can often be related to an ongoing or previous abusive relationship, and therefore we encourage you to read Are You in an Abusive relationship.

Stalking can also be unpredictable, adding to the stress that you may already feel. Seek help to deal with the emotions you are having by reaching out to NYIT's Counseling and Wellness Center professionals or a community resource in addition to friends and family. Ask for help when you need it.

Find other ways to take care of yourself, reduce your stress, and make yourself feel safe, as dealing with stalking can be an emotionally and physically overwhelming situation. Take time to be creative and do something that you enjoy and remember that everyone copes with these difficult situations differently.