Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 34— - THE PEACE CORPS › § 2507a
The President must create and run thorough sexual assault risk-reduction and response training for all volunteers. The training should follow best practices as much as possible and be made with advice from experts. When a volunteer reaches their country, they must get country-specific training about local gender culture, ways to reduce risk, what medical care is available there (including forensic exams, HIV post-exposure treatment, STI screening, and pregnancy tests), MedEvac rules, and how a victim can try to take legal action. Applicants must get clear, easy-to-find country reports before they enroll. Those reports cover past crimes (including unreported crime estimates), how often volunteers end service early, health risks, reports of sexual harassment, what services the Peace Corps provides (medical care, counseling, Office of Victim Advocacy help), and volunteer satisfaction. After seeing the info, applicants may pick a different country. Before enrolling, applicants also get the Inspector General’s contact, written instructions and direct phone numbers for the Sexual Assault Response Liaison and the Office of Victim Advocacy, and a 24-hour sexual assault hotline for anonymous reports, crisis counseling, and information. Key terms: personally identifying information (basic ID details like name, address, contact info, Social Security number, or other facts that together identify someone); restricted reporting (a private report that lets a victim get services without automatically starting an official investigation); sexual assault (acts listed in chapter 109A of title 18, whether by strangers or people the victim knows); stalking (behavior that makes a person fear for their safety or causes big emotional harm). If restricted-report information must be shared, it can be shown only for specific reasons (with the victim’s written OK, to stop a serious danger, to people who give services, or by court or law), and the Peace Corps must try to tell and protect the victim.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 2507a
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73