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Archives for February 2014

Digest of Street Harassment News: Feb. 3, 2014

February 3, 2014 By SSHIntern

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment **

Street Harassment Stories

Share your story! You can read street harassment stories on the Web at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

Bijoya in Bangladesh

Collective Action for Safe Spaces

Everyday Sexism

HarassMap in Egypt

The Hollaback Sites

Ramallah Street Watch in Palestine

Resist Harassment in Lebanon

Safe City India

Safe Streets in Yemen

Street Harassment in South Africa

Street Harassment In the News, on the Blogs:

* Times of India, “Bazarkhala tense after clash over eve-teasing”

* Jakarta Post, “Sexual harassment victims face hurdles in getting justice”

* RU Daily Targum, “Men’s street harassment makes women feel unsafe”

* India Today, “Bulandshahr class kills 3, injures four”

* Bangalore Mirror, “Malaysian girl accuses co-passenger of sexual harassment aboard flight”

* Indileak, “Three killed over an incident of eve-teasing”

* The Daily Star, “Sexual harassment not abating”

* Indian Express, “S-I refuses to register complaint of eve-teasing victim, shifted”

* Financial Express Bangladesh, “Youths jailed for eve teasing in Habiganj”

* Hollaback, “Week In Our Shoes: Keep Calm and Inspire On Edition”

* Times of India, “Eve-teasing accused yet to be arrested”

* Free Press Journal, “Guard attacked for opposing eve-teasers”

* Times of India, “Beware, eve-teasers, CCTV is guarding Karnatak University hotels“

Announcements:

New:

* If your group, organization, or campus plans to participate in International Anti-Street Harassment Week, please contact Holly (hkearl @ stopstreetharassment.org) and we can add you to the list of participating co-sponsors.

* Do you know your legal rights? If you live in the U.S., check out our Know Your Rights Toolkit with state-by-state information about what forms of street harassment you can report.

Reminders:

* We’re still collecting stories about the street harassment of LGBQTAI people for a new web section — please consider sharing yours, if relevant!

10 Tweets from the Week:

* @LeArtCorner: @raveenasays @StopStHarassmnt In London I always went out in baggy clothes so the harassment would be less (but it still happened).

* LogophilicMind: That unshakeable sense of vertigo when someone manages to ruin your sense of safety. #streetharassment #weneedcommunitycenters #urbanpoverty

* @mujer_cita_MIA: Miami sunshine returns after dismal grey week & so does compulsory #streetharassment

* @reveenasays: You can put a paper bag over your head and still get harassed about 10 times walking down Broadway. #streetharassment #notacompliment

* @SorayaLightyear: I don’t give a damn if your nephew thinks I’m cute I’m just trying to walk to work leave me alone… #streetharassment

* @lizbayer: I think that literally every creep in Baltimore was out roaming the streets during my run this evening #StreetHarassment #whyyyyyyy

* @MandingoRFC: What folks are not gonna do today is act like folks making this shit up. My sis has come home crying from street harassment.

* @halfdadhalfdog: Street harassment is very real. Sick of not being able to walk these streets without hearing “YO!!! CUTE ASS BOY!!!” This is 2014. Grow up.

* @renee_patrice: Nothing like some good ol street harassment to sober me up during my walk home

* @ladyfleur:@michaelcoyote If you’ve never experienced street harassment you have no idea how humiliating it feels, especially when you’re a teen.

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Filed Under: street harassment, weekly round up

“We made it clear that we were uncomfortable”

February 3, 2014 By Contributor

My friend and I, both 15, were on the city’s public transit just talking to each other when a man started talking to us. He asked how old we were, where we were from, personal questions he had no right to ask. It was a cold day and we were both wearing thick winter jackets, the only visible skin was our faces and hands. We made it clear that we were uncomfortable, but he kept talking to us even knowing we were minors. He was probably twice our age, or close to it. At the next station we got off the train.

– Anonymous

Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
Check out the new book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers!

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

USA: The Effects of Street Harassment on Political Speech

February 2, 2014 By Correspondent

Andrea Ayres-Deets, San Francisco, CA, USA, SSH Blog Correspondent

Street harassment forces us to question our safety. It compels us to reconsider our environment and surroundings. So many of us are far too familiar with the quickening of our pace, while we plan an escape route. Just in case. Your pulse races, and you grab your phone, or put a key in-between your knuckles. Just in case. Walking down the street should not have to be an act of heroics.

We often discuss street harassment at the personal level, and there is no doubt of the psychological trauma it causes. Talking about street harassment in this way is essential. The sharing of our communal experiences enables us to breakdown the culture of tolerance that has long permitted the continued existence of street harassment. We cannot forget to discuss the importance of the societal cost street harassment has.

It’s been well documented that street harassment alters the way we move about in public spaces, but what about the limitations it puts on our ability to engage in political speech? In Tahir, Egypt, we saw how extreme violence against women was used to limit their political participation in the uprising against then President Hosni Mubarak. The freedom to express ourselves through political speech is perhaps not always at the forefront of our minds, but when we are denied this right––we are being denied a right that harasses have and use freely. We need to unpack what this means for our representation and involvement in a Democratic society.

In order to demonstrate how street harassment is used to limit political participation, let’s take a look at a few examples. It’s important to note that the intention of the harasser does not matter, an individual does not have to intend to limit an individuals political participation in order to do so.

For example, if we look at the assaults that occurred during the Occupy Wall Street movement, we see women who are engaged in a political demonstration who were then assaulted. The overall effect of these assaults meant that women and others who are common targets of harassment, had to change their behavior in order to continue their participation. Those in public spaces should not have to disrupt or alter the manners in which we engage in political speech for fear of reprisal, harassment, or abuse.

Brazil SlutWalk. Image via The News Junkie

What we see in the photo on the right is a man who exposed himself during a Slut Walk march. Regardless of what this man’s intentions were, he was engaging in a violent act while people were participating in political speech. He sought to devalue their message, their numbers, to make a mockery of their protest. It is a prime example of how street harassment is used to tell individuals that their very presence, is not wanted––is not protected. There are still other images of women who are participating in political speech, whose images and protests are altered in an effort to silence them.

For many, even the thought of participating in a demonstration represents a risk they are just unwilling to take for fear of being harassed. In this way, we do not currently possess the proper framework for understanding how many are affected. Though research does indicate that prior victims of street harassment are more likely to avoid certain areas or streets “all or more of the time.”

That is perhaps what is so troubling about street harassment: too often its effects silence us. The effects of silencing can manifest themselves both physically and mentally. Either we alter our physical being, or we avoid areas, or we stop engaging in political activity. If we do not feel welcome and safe in public spaces each day, then how we will feel welcome and safe when engaged in a political activity?

What we are really discussing here is the denial of our ability to live our lives to the fullest, to exercise our lives without policing our actions and selves out of fear. This is one of the many important reasons why street harassment must stop.

Andrea Ayres-Deets worked as a politics intern at PolicyMic and field organizer. She currently consults with startups in the SF area on content and how to better engage users. You can follow her on twitter: @missafayres or check out her website ayres-deets.com.

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Filed Under: correspondents, street harassment

We’re #NotBuyingIt This SuperBowl Sunday

February 1, 2014 By SSHIntern

Kendra Corbin. SSH Intern

Via iTunes

This year’s Super Bowl XLVIII will air on Sunday, February 2 at 6:30 PM. Millions of viewers will lounge in front of their TVs with junk food and beer. Instead, I will be parked on my couch, rolling my eyes and making that, “ugh,” sound under my breath, awaiting the inevitable sexism that plagues Super Bowl commercials.

In the past, Super Bowl Sunday has been a breeding ground for sexist ads. Go Daddy notoriously receives backlash for its ill-fated attempts at making Internet domain names sexy. Take a look at last year’s cringe-worthy commercial. As a warning, it’s painfully awkward to watch. The slogan is, “When sexy meets smart, your small business scores.” Aside from being genuinely gross, this commercial implies that beautiful people, women in particular, cannot be smart and smart people cannot be beautiful.

In 2012, Teleflora released a steamy commercial with questionable implications. The flower company’s commercial features a beautiful woman slowly slipping into lingerie. She looks into the camera and seductively says, “Guys, Valentine’s Day is not that complicated. Give and you shall receive.” Get it? If you buy a woman flowers, you’ll automatically get laid. What an adorable message to send to millions of Super Bowl viewers.

Also in 2012, Fiat released a commercial that features a woman that catches a man gawking at her in the streets. At first she is angered, though her anger quickly turns into heated passion. The man then wakes up from his daydream just as the beautiful woman turns back into a car. This commercial is problematic because it objectifies women while simultaneously making light of street harassment. Leering at women in streets is not a sexy turn-on. It’s creepy.

Luckily, this year viewers can combat sexist commercials by using The Representation Project’s new #NotBuyingIt app. During the Super Bowl, viewers can publicly call out companies for their offensive advertising tactics. Although #NotBuyingIt has previously been available on Twitter, it is now easily accessible via the iPhone app. The goal is to spread the word about sexist advertisements, grab the attention of the offending companies, and spark a positive change within the media and society.

Stop Street Harassment’s similar operation Campaign Against Companies calls out offensive ads that specifically trivialize street harassment. Along with using the #NotBuyingIt app, we encourage viewers to submit offensive ads related to street harassment, as well. In the past, Stop Street Harassment and supporters have been able to convince several companies to refine their distasteful advertisements.

During the game, I do not want to see any scantily clad women used as a marketing ploy. I do not want to see women objectified for profit. I do not want to see female actresses pretending to be strippers. The hypersexual Super Bowl commercials say a great deal about how the public views real life women. The media has the influential power to make us view women as sexualized objects. This alarming mindset can have a tremendous impact on the amount of street harassment that real life women experience.

This Sunday, take note of the messages that companies are sending to their consumers. If you spot sexism in a commercial and it offends you, tell someone about it! #NotBuyingIt is a great way to start spreading the word. If you plan on traveling to Super Bowl parties, stay safe.

Kendra Corbin is senior at Shenandoah University. She is majoring in Mass Communications and minoring in Women’s Studies.

 

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Filed Under: offensive ads, street harassment Tagged With: #notbuyingit, MissRepresentation, super bowl

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