Title 22Foreign Relations and IntercourseRelease 119-73

§2507b Sexual assault policy

Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 34— - THE PEACE CORPS › § 2507b

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The President must create and run a full sexual assault policy for the Peace Corps. It must apply at every post and follow best practices when possible. Each country program must have a trained Sexual Assault Response Liaison (SARL) to help victims get to safety and, if the victim wants, stay with them during the local response. Staff who learn of an assault must immediately contact a Victim’s Advocate, and each post must have staff ready to provide the services listed below. Volunteers who report an assault must not lose their living allowances. The Peace Corps must keep a record if someone resigns before an allegation is decided and must check that record before hiring or placing that person again. Host families and a workplace authority must get basic prevention information. Assaults by host-family members or assigned local staff must be recorded in site history and the global tracking system and used when making future placement and benefit decisions. The President must consult experts with international experience while making the policy. At minimum, the policy must give volunteers a choice of private or official reporting; a SARL and Victim’s Advocate; a forensic exam if the volunteer wants and local law allows it; emergency medical care with a way to review the provider; counseling and psychiatric medication when needed; a safety and treatment plan; evacuation for medical care with staff accompaniment and, if sent to the United States, a practical choice of medical providers; and clear information about law enforcement, prosecution options, and legal help. The President must train all staff who work overseas on the policy.

Full Legal Text

Title 22, §2507b

Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The President shall develop and implement a comprehensive sexual assault policy that—
(1)includes a system for restricted and unrestricted reporting of sexual assault;
(2)mandates, for each Peace Corps country program, the designation of a Sexual Assault Response Liaison (SARL), who shall receive comprehensive training on procedures to respond to reports of sexual assault, with duties including ensuring that volunteers who are victims of sexual assault are moved to a safe environment and accompanying victims through the in-country response at the request of the victim;
(3)requires any employee of the Peace Corps to immediately contact a Victim’s Advocate upon receiving a report of sexual assault in accordance with the restricted and unrestricted reporting guidelines promulgated by the Peace Corps and require the Peace Corps to designate the staff at each post who shall be responsible for providing the services described in subsection (c);
(4)to the extent practicable, conforms to best practices in the sexual assault field;
(5)is applicable to all posts at which volunteers serve;
(6)includes a guarantee that volunteers will not suffer loss of living allowances for reporting a sexual assault;
(7)maintains a record documenting the resignation of any employee or volunteer of the Peace Corps who resigns before a determination has been made regarding an alleged violation of the sexual misconduct policy or other serious policy violations;
(8)takes into account the record maintained under paragraph (7) before such employee or volunteer is hired, enrolled, or otherwise invited to work with the Peace Corps;
(9)provides orientation or information regarding the awareness and prevention of sexual assault and sexual harassment to—
(A)Peace Corps-selected host families; and
(B)a designated person of authority at the volunteer’s initial workplace; and
(10)ensures, to the extent practicable and appropriate, that any assault on, or any harm or injury to, a volunteer that is committed by any member of a host family or any national of a host country that was assigned by the Peace Corps to facilitate volunteer work is—
(A)documented in an appropriate site history file and in the global tracking and recording system established pursuant to section 2507h(c) of this title; and
(B)taken into account with respect to determinations regarding placements of future volunteers at such post and the provision of any funds or other benefit by the Peace Corps.
(b)In developing the sexual assault policy under subsection (a), the President shall consult with and incorporate, as appropriate, the recommendations and views of experts in the sexual assault field, including experts with international experience.
(c)The sexual assault policy developed under subsection (a) shall include, at a minimum, the following services with respect to a volunteer who has been a victim of sexual assault:
(1)The option of pursuing either restricted or unrestricted reporting of an assault.
(2)Provision of a SARL and Victim’s Advocate to the volunteer.
(3)At a volunteer’s discretion, provision of a sexual assault forensic exam in accordance with applicable host country law.
(4)If necessary, the provision of emergency health care, including a mechanism for such volunteer to evaluate such provider.
(5)If necessary, the provision of counseling and psychiatric medication.
(6)Completion of a safety and treatment plan with the volunteer, if necessary.
(7)Evacuation of such volunteer for medical treatment, accompanied by a Peace Corps staffer at the request of such volunteer. When evacuated to the United States, such volunteer shall be provided, to the extent practicable, a choice of medical providers including a mechanism for such volunteers to evaluate the provider.
(8)An explanation to the volunteer of available law enforcement and prosecutorial options, and legal representation.
(d)The President shall train all staff outside the United States regarding the sexual assault policy developed under subsection (a).

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Amendments

2018—Subsec. (a)(3). Pub. L. 115–256, § 303(1), substituted “any employee of the Peace Corps” for “SARLs” and “Victim’s Advocate” for “Victim Advocate” and inserted “and require the Peace Corps to designate the staff at each post who shall be responsible for providing the services described in subsection (c)” before semicolon at end. Subsec. (a)(7) to (10). Pub. L. 115–256, § 303(2)–(4), added pars. (7) to (10).

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

22 U.S.C. § 2507b

Title 22Foreign Relations and Intercourse

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73