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Get To Know Us

Our Mission

To turn society’s human right of CONSENT into a powerful and enforceable civil right, backed by law. Doing so will prevent sex crimes and end rape culture!

Our Story

Founded by Joyce Short, the Consent Awareness Network (CAN) is made up of advocates, educators, survivors, legal professionals, community leaders, and allies who believe that consent is the foundation of justice, dignity, and human respect. Each person within CAN brings lived experience, professional expertise, or both, united by a shared commitment to rewriting the narratives that have historically silenced survivors and minimized harm. Together, we work to replace confusion with clarity, fear with understanding, and outdated myths with consent-centered truth. Our strength lies in the diversity of voices and disciplines we represent, and in the belief that meaningful change happens when people come together with integrity, courage, and care.

The people of CAN are essential because systems do not change on their own—people change them. By educating communities, informing policy, supporting survivors, and challenging harmful norms, CAN members serve as bridges between law, culture, and lived reality. We hold space for difficult conversations, advocate for autonomy and accountability, and model what consent-centered leadership looks like in practice. Our collective work ensures that consent is not treated as a technicality, but as a human right, and that justice and empowerment remain inseparable. CAN exists because the voices, wisdom, and commitment of its people make transformation possible.

CAN Featured & Quoted In

Meet Our Team

The Consent Awareness Network (CAN) is made up of advocates, educators, survivors, legal professionals, community leaders, and allies who believe that consent is the foundation of justice, dignity, and human respect.

Joyce Short

Joyce  is the Founder and CEO of the Consent Awareness Network (CAN) whose mission is to correctly define “consent” in penal laws across the US and around the world. CAN advocates with legislators and the public to introduce legislative bills that drive change.

A sexual assault survivor, she is a leading expert on consent, romance scams, and sexual assault. She is a recipient of a “Woman of Distinction” honor by the NY State Assembly.

Joyce lives in New York City where she manages tennis programs for children of all ages. Her professional career has included trading corporate bonds for Salomon Brothers and directing the global faculty at the New York Institute of Finance, a wholly owned subsidiary of the “Financial Times.” She is a NY State Licensed Real Estate Broker specializing in the purchase, sale, and rental of residential properties.

Ms. Short has published four authoritative books on Sexual Assault and Romance Scams.

Book Joyce to Speak

Nina Lucas

Nina serves as Chief of Staff and Consent Outreach Ambassador for the Consent Awareness Network (CAN), where she helps amplify consent-centered education, advocacy, and cultural change. She has also worked with Never Alone Advocacy, an organization founded to confront and dismantle abuses of power within the military. A classically trained singer, Nina’s secret superpower is opera—an art form that mirrors her commitment to using her voice with strength, precision, and purpose. Whether on stage or in advocacy spaces, she is dedicated to informing, educating, and empowering others, lending her powerful voice to every effort to #CodifyConsent.

Book Nina to Speak

From Our Fellow Consent Crusaders...

“CAN is an eye opener that can turn our human right of consent into a civil right backed by law.”

Andrea Constand
State’s Witness in Bill Cosby Indecent Assault case, Pennsylvania 2018

“This small but crucial addition to our lawbooks could make all the difference for sexual assault survivors as they grapple with the legal proceedings and raise the public’s awareness, in an effort to prevent crimes involving sexual contact.”

Miriam Haley
State’s Witness in Harvey Weinstein’s Criminal Sexual Assault case, New York 2020

All legal and law enforcement should “read this compelling book on consent and become a voice for change.”

Steve Bishop
Detective, Colorado Law Enforcement