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Two Hours of Walking as a Woman in Costa Rica

October 4, 2016 By HKearl

Here’s a new video about street harassment from Rene Montiel Bonilla, a Costa Rican filmmaker, who filmed a woman (Laura Leon) walking through San Jose for two hours.

Bonilla explained that 61.7% of the 2.4 million women in Costa Rica have reported being victims of street harassment and that she “decided to make a short documentary to do something about it,” according to QCostaRica.

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Filed Under: News stories, Resources, street harassment

UK Study Shows Objectification, Street Harassment Affects Girls

October 3, 2016 By HKearl

Each year, Girlguiding, the UK’s leading charity for girls and young women, asks girls what they think through our Girls’ Attitudes Survey. They collect the views of over 1,600 girls and young women aged 7 to 21 across the country.

This year’s report shows that safety in public spaces is a big concern.

girlguiding-research-2016-unsafe-on-own

So is objectification. Sadly, 36% of seven to 10-year-old girls believe they are rated more on their looks than their abilities.

Overall, Girlguiding says its survey shows girls and young women face “multiple, compound pressures” including exposure to images that objectify women, sexist online abuse and street harassment.

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: girls, objectification, research, UK

New Stickers Against Harassment in Minneapolis

October 2, 2016 By HKearl

A group of friends in Minneapolis, MN, who were tired of street harassment recently formed the Design Bitches Collective and they’ve been taking suggestions for stickers against street harassment. Check out some of the forthcoming designs!

design-bitches-collective-stickers-oct-2016-minneapolis-1

design-bitches-collective-stickers-oct-2016-minneapolis-2

 

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: activism, minneapolis, stickers

Beautiful New Respect Posters in Washington, D.C.

October 1, 2016 By HKearl

Today marks the start of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Our friends at Collective Action for Safe Spaces are doing a great project to raise awareness that everyone deserves respect everywhere they go, be that their homes or public spaces.

respectposters-dcoct2016

Via the DCist:

“New posters are going up around the city reminding people they deserve to be treated with the respect and providing resources for survivors of abuse, courtesy of SafeBars and the D.C. Coalition Against Domestic Violence.

The posters, designed by Baltimore-based muralist Maura Dwyer, depict a diverse set of people. “We wanted to highlight the faces of some of our city’s marginalized identities,” says Jessica Raven, co-founder of SafeBars and executive director of Collective Action for Safe Spaces.

The images speak to incidents that have taken place in D.C. in the past year. A reported incident of a library officer kicking a woman out of Shaw Library for wearing a hjiab, a breastfeeding patron at Tenleytown Library said she was “warned” by a library assistant that teen boys would be entering the facility, and misgendering at Banneker Pool led to bystander intervention training for D.C. Parks and Recreation staffers.

Volunteers are plastering the 2,500 posters—500 of each of the five designs—throughout bars, coffee shops, storefronts and other locales to mark October as Domestic Violence Awareness Month. The theme for this year’s campaign is “Spread Love D.C.,” with the idea of generating conversations about what makes for a healthy relationship.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: domestic violence awareness month, Washington DC

Screening of New Egyptian Street Harassment Film in Chicago

September 29, 2016 By HKearl

[Editor’s Note: This is being shared with the permission of the filmmakers]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CHICAGO, IL – Sep 28, 2016 –  A new documentary on sexual harassment in Egypt directed by Chicago filmmaker to screen at Jane Addams Museum

14087415_10101436748880917_1753161913_oSexual harassment is a pervasive issue internationally, yet it has only recently gained more attention in the media. By intimidating and objectifying women in public spaces, harassment discourages women from working, socializing, and living a normal life. Egypt has recently been identified as the worst country for women in the Arab world, largely due to the staggering UN statistic that 99% of Egyptian women have been sexually harassed. But the epidemic not only exists abroad; according to Stop Street Harassment, 65% of women in the US have experienced street harassment, with an even higher prevalence in urban areas. This makes this topic extremely relevant for the Chicago community at large.

An award-winning documentary on sexual harassment in Egypt, “The People’s Girls,” is a crowdfunded film that is the recipient of awards from the Worldfest Houston International Film Festival, International Open Film Festival, and the Ambassador Award at the Flickers Rhode Island International Film Festival. It has also been featured in various media outlets, such as Huffington Post, Buzzfeed, France 24,  El Mundo.

In the documentary, directors Colette Ghunim and Tinne Van Loon interview both harassers and survivors in Egypt to explore the root of this problem. They talk with women who have fought back and also conduct hidden camera social experiments. Before filming the documentary, Ghunim and Van Loon created a short clip titled “Creepers on the Bridge”, which captured the feeling of being stared at and catcalled in the streets of Cairo. It went viral, quickly gaining over 2 million views worldwide. They then created a Kickstarter campaign to fund their documentary on sexual harassment in Egypt. Over the following months, they were interviewed by many international news sources. They received contributions from over 500 backers worldwide on Kickstarter and gain a fanbase of over 11,000 people on Facebook to create “The People’s Girls”.

In honor of International Day of the Girl, the Illinois Humanities Council and MALA will host a screening of the documentary on Tuesday, October 11 at 6 p.m. at the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum. Co-director Colette Ghunim will also be in attendance for a post-screening Q&A.

Order tickets through their Eventbrite page, which has a suggested donation amount of $10.  These funds will go towards a campaign to conduct free screenings in six different locations across Egypt in February 2016.

The People’s Girls – Synopsis

thepeoplesgirls01Sexual harassment has been a growing problem in Egypt over the last few years, especially in Cairo. UN Women reported that over 99% of Egyptian women have suffered from sexual harassment in their lifetime. Due to the extensive media coverage on the issue, the Egyptian government introduced anti-sexual harassment legislation, making it possible for harassers to face years in prison.

In September of 2014, filmmakers Colette Ghunim and Tinne Van Loon created a viral video, Creepers on the Bridge, showing the haunting stares of sexual harassers in Cairo’s streets. They now bring you The People’s Girls, a documentary film which through a series of interviews and social experiments takes a closer look at Egypt to see who is to blame for harassment and how women are fighting back. Because patriarchal societies often overlook women’s rights violations, this documentary serves as a catalyst for public debate not only in Egypt but internationally, as prominent cases of sexual harassment frequently occur on a global scale.

Website: www.thepeoplesgirls.com

Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/benaatelnas

Twitter: @thepeoplesgirls

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: documentary, Egypt, event, film, screening

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