About
About
The National Resource Center on Cybercrimes Against Individuals (NRCC) is a project funded by the Department of Justice, Office of Violence Against Women. Drawing on the combined expertise of its four partner organizations, it provides comprehensive resources, training, technical assistance, and research on cybercrimes against individuals at the intersection of stalking, domestic violence, image-based abuse, and dating violence.
Meet Our Partners
AEquitas is a nonprofit dedicated to advancing justice in sexual violence, intimate partner violence, stalking, and human trafficking cases. A project of AEquitas, SPARC is the only federally-funded resource provider for education and training on stalking, including its intersection with domestic violence and sexual assault.
Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI) is the leading U.S. nonprofit dedicated to combatting online abuses that threaten civil rights and civil liberties. Its Image Abuse Helpline has assisted over 36,000 victims and survivors of image-based sexual abuse.
Since 1978, NW3C has developed and delivered training and technical assistance focusing on economic crime investigation, high-tech crime investigation, digital forensics, criminal intelligence, and legal strategies. NW3C provides training and other services at no cost to state, local, tribal, and territorial criminal justice practitioners throughout the United States.
The Safety Net Project at the National Network to End Domestic Violence focuses on the intersection of technology and abuse, and works to promote survivor safety and privacy. It provides trainings, technical assistance, and resources, and influences discourse on technology abuse and safety globally.
Other Collaborators
FORGE is a national transgender anti-violence organization, founded in 1994. FORGE’s primary focus is providing TTA to victim service providers, victim advocates, and other allied professionals to help them feel more prepared and confident about providing respectful and competent care to trans/nonbinary survivors of violence and trauma.
The Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition (MIWSAC) exists to support culturally-grounded, grassroots advocacy and to provide national leadership and technical assistance to end gender-based violence. MIWSAC supports the development of local and national policy and capacity building of Indigenous communities to end all forms of violence and oppression, including racism, sexism, classism, heterosexism, ageism, and all other acts of violence that impede the safety and wellness of all people.