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The USA will never be “land of the free” if there is street harassment

July 2, 2014 By HKearl

My latest op-ed on #streetharassment:

“…Street harassment isn’t merely a quality of life issue; this is a human rights issue and the United States needs to treat it that way.

At the national level, this could mean the Obama administration and national advocacy groups include it as a form of discrimination and gender violence in the work they do.

At the state level, governments could become more uniform in outlawing up-skirt photos, following, and hate crimes, each types of serious harassment that are perfectly legal in some states.

Locally, mayors, city council members, and transit agencies should work with citizens on efforts to make their communities safer. Boston, Philadelphia, New York City, and Washington, DC, are leaders in this, each having held a city council hearing on street harassment and/or launched an anti-harassment campaign on their transit system. A few months ago in New York, Mayor de Blasio promised to address street harassment during his term in office. Hopefully he will keep that promise.

We also need more education about what street harassment is and to teach the next generation how to interact with each other in public spaces with respect and consent.

In the United States, we like to see ourselves as a leader in the world, a nation of freedom and equality, but to me and to millions of people who feel unsafe in public spaces, that will never ring completely true until we address and end the widespread problem of sexual harassment and assault in public spaces.”

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Filed Under: street harassment

Video: Stop Telling Women to Smile on MHP Show

June 30, 2014 By HKearl

Visual artist Tatyana Fazlalizadeh talks about taking on street harassment with her campaign “Stop Telling Women to Smile” on the Melissa Harris-Perry Show.

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Filed Under: News stories, Stories, street harassment

Women of the Bronx: Speak on Street Harassment

June 27, 2014 By HKearl

“Adam Levine-Peres asked women of the Bronx how they felt growing up in this borough, if they felt respected and safe….Check out what these Bronx ladies had to say.”

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

New Film: Out in the Night

June 23, 2014 By HKearl

I’m teaching a “Representations of Women” class at George Mason University (GMU) where I am a new adjunct professor. A key lesson from my class is that women are, first of all, under-represented in most media (from tv shows and movies to op-eds and news articles) and a second lesson is that when they are there, they’re often sexualized or stereotyped.

GMU Professor Giovanna Chesler is the producer of a new film Out in the Night which encompasses both street harassment and representations of women in the media — and more.

Via Bitch Magazine:

“Who has the right to self-defense? How do race, class, sexuality, and gender expression affect what our society sees as violent? In 75 minutes, new documentary Out in the Night challenges us to consider these questions.

The film follows the case of Venice Brown, Terrain Dandridge, Renata Hill and Patreese Johnson, four women who became known as the New Jersey Four after they defended themselves against an assault on the streets of New York City’s West Village.

On August 18, 2006, seven young black lesbians friends from Newark, New Jersey, came to New York City’s West Village. As they walked down the street, they were harassed by a man named Duane Buckle. When they told him they were gay, he began threatening to rape them—then he physically attacked them, throwing his lit cigarette at them, ripping the hair from one woman’s head, and choking another woman. The women defended themselves and, at some point during the four-minute fight, two unknown men jumped in to assist them. As Buckle attempted to choke Renata Hill, Patreese Johnson stabbed him with a pen knife. The two unknown men left the scene, but when police arrived, they arrested the women. Buckle was taken to the hospital where he stated that men had attacked him. Nonetheless, the women were charged with assault and attempted murder.”

From the Out in the Night Facebook page:

“Out in the Night follows their journey to Rikers Island, to the courtroom, and through slanderous media coverage that labeled them a “Wolfpack” and “Lesbian Gang”. While exploring the fight from all sides through the security camera footage that captured it, that hot August night in 2006 can be seen from many perspectives. But our film’s purpose is to examine the events after the fight: biased media coverage likening the women to “man-hating” animals, and unprecedentedly harsh sentencing by the court. This story shows how four young, queer women of color were unfairly criminalized for defending themselves.”

The film team has been screening the documentary at film festivals (there are a few screenings coming up, see if there’s one near you!) and Professor Chesler and I plan to meet up upon her return. Stay tuned!

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Filed Under: LGBTQ, Resources, Stories, street harassment

Egyptian man sentenced to jail for taking inappropriate photo

June 22, 2014 By HKearl

The anti-sexual harassment law in Egypt is being used.

Via Reuters —

“A Cairo court sentenced a man to one year in jail on Saturday for harassing a woman, the swiftest such ruling since Egypt introduced a new law in early June to combat sexual harassment.

Abdel Lattif Abdel Fattah, a 39-year-old electrician, was arrested only three days ago, judicial sources said. He was accused of taking pictures with his mobile telephone of a woman passenger on a public bus while she was sleeping.

Abdel Fattah was dragged to the nearest police station by other passengers on the bus, who also testified against him, the source said. He was sentenced to hard labor during his imprisonment and fined 3,000 Egyptian pounds ($420).”

Thoughts?!

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

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