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What I’ve Been Reading: Early June 2015 Edition

June 2, 2015 By HKearl

Here are some of the articles I’ve been reading the past two weeks.

Korea Times:

“Concerned residents in the Haebangchon neighborhood, located next to Itaewon in Seoul, have formed a community awareness group in response to an increased amount of sexual harassment in the area. People Unite against Street Harassment (PUSH) was established in March this year.” Read street harassment stories in the Korea Observer.

Global Times (China):

“One of my friends from Chengdu, Sichuan Province, told me that she was groped by a man who covered her mouth to keep her from screaming out.

Apart from empty streets, crowded subway trains in China are also common places for sexual assaults to take place. There are numerous photos and videos on the Internet taken by bystanders of women being harassed in various ways, including men trying to take photos up women’s skirts.

Some reports state that up to seven in every 10 women have experienced some form of sexual harassment. Public transportation authorities in some cities have launched campaigns to crack down on sexual harassment on the subway, but they are not always effective.”

SlutWalk in Jerusalem (Photo: Gil Yohanan)

Y Net News:

“400 people embarked on a SlutWalk on Friday afternoon in Jerusalem, protesting sexual violence, sexual harassment and the objectification of women…

Tamar, a Jerusalem resident in her 20s, said she was taking part in the walk to protest against sexual violence. “It doesn’t matter what I’m wearing, my body is not public property. I’m not a sex object, I can dress however I feel like and it doesn’t give anyone the right to touch me, make offensive comments about me or talk to me disrespectfully,” she said.

Tamar said she experienced verbal sexual harassment in the past. “There is a lot of harassment on the street, a lot of terror. I have been harassed by men on the street since the age of 14. It happened in other cities in the country and actually anywhere in the world,” she said.”

Guardian:

“It’s never been my style, but dudes have been hollering, cat calling or cracking on women years before I was even born. I grew up in east Baltimore’s dope-boy culture, where the coolest guys attracted women by dressing nice, being popular and having conversations. Screaming at women and acting thirsty always looked stupid to me and always will. Seeing the look on that young woman’s face while she was walking with her child made me realize how scary it can be for a woman to walk down the street.

If we men are the problem, we can also be part of the solution…Us men are responsible for not only stopping guys from harassing women, but also telling others to do the same. For this is the only way to shift the culture.”

Herald-Review:

“Oregon lawmakers on Tuesday advanced a proposal aimed at closing a loophole in state privacy laws that recently let a man go unpunished after he took photographs up a teenager’s skirt.

The state Senate unanimously passed the bill, which would make it a misdemeanor to surreptitiously take photos up women’s dresses without their consent. A teachers union proposed the measure after a student took so-called upskirt cellphone photos of an educator and shared them online.

The Senate vote came three months after an Oregon judge ruled a 61-year-old man did nothing illegal when he snapped photos up a teen’s skirt in a Target store.”

Fortune:

“A driver contracted with U.S.-based online taxi company Uber Technologies was arrested near New Delhi on Tuesday, police said, after a woman passenger accused him of sexual harassment when she hailed his cab over the weekend.

Uber was banned in New Delhi in December after another woman passenger accused one of its drivers of rape. The company resumed its services in January after applying for a radio taxi licence, which it still awaits.”

Vice News:

“Holly Kearl, an adjunct professor of women’s studies at George Mason University in Virginia and author of two books about sexual harassment, said that many state laws haven’t caught up with technology, and that it often takes someone being acquitted for a crime before politicians are even aware laws aren’t adequate.

“One of the biggest weakness with many voyeurism laws is that they don’t include public spaces as places that people have the right to privacy,” she said. “Places like locker rooms or bathrooms are protected, but places like subways and parks often aren’t.”…Kearl said that while laws concerning voyeuristic photography become stronger, most would benefit from additional punishments for those who upload those images to the internet, something few laws currently address. And, as depressing as it might sound, we might not see any improvements to the law until more high-profile cases make upskirt photography impossible to ignore.

“This isn’t so common that it’s happening to someone every day,” Kearl said. “Until it is more prevalent, it might not gain traction or become a priority.”

Ravishly:

“It’s incredible how a short interaction can have such a huge effect on your day. Just one catcall can make me go from feeling fabulous to wishing I could curl up into a ball and disappear. It’s bad enough when I’m street harassed out by myself — I feel vulnerable and deciding how to respond can be hard. But it gets really complicated when I’m harassed and with my child.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

2015 International Anti-Street Harassment Week Report

June 1, 2015 By HKearl

2015endsheweekcover

Our report features the actions of groups and organizations in 41 countries and 24 U.S. states and Washington, D.C.! Wow, it was an amazing week of activism.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week

NCCWSL and Awesome Con

May 31, 2015 By HKearl

NCCWSL CASS SSHOn Friday, I co-presented with Collective Action for Safe Spaces (CASS) at the AAUW/NASPA National Conference for College Women Student Leaders at the University of Maryland College Park. We talked to 25 college women from across the nation about street harassment and how they can use activism, teaching, and writing to make concrete change and sway opinions.

There was a portion of time for people to share stories and it ran over because so many people wanted to share recent experiences they’d had on and around campus. The most heartbreaking story came from a transwoman of color who was followed by men to her campus and they would not leave until she and several other students came out to confront them. She said she felt lucky she had back up. Her concern for her safety is very justified and she talked about thinking regularly about transwomen who are attacked and killed in public spaces simply for being their authentic self.

5.31.15 Awesome Con, DC collageOn Saturday and Sunday, I assisted Feminist Public Works/Geeks for Consent and CASS in tabling at Awesome Con in Washington, DC. Those organizations have done a lot of work to help the conference organizers address harassment (e.g. training volunteers to assist those who have been harassed, posting signs about consent and no harassment, etc). I spoke with many people who said they felt there was a better culture of respect this year and that they felt safe etc.

On Saturday as we were wrapping up, a man stopped by to say he had stopped 8 people from taking photos of others without first seeking consent to do so.

Today, two people who stood out to me the most were a mom who stopped by with her 13ish-year-old son and took lots of materials about consent and told him he should talk to his friends about consent (yes!) and the mom who stopped by with her three daughters who looked like they were all under 12. She also grabbed a lot of materials and said to them, “You haven’t been harassed yet but you will be soon enough.” It’s good she’s thinking about how to help them when the inevitable happens… but how said that it is inevitable.

All told, both events were a great opportunity to talk one-on-one about street harassment with people from all over the country and learn about their experiences and offer them support.

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Filed Under: Events, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: awesome con, NCCWSL

New HarassMap Campaign: ‘Harasser = Criminal’

May 23, 2015 By HKearl

From our friend HarassMap in Egypt:

“Our campaign ‘Harasser = Criminal’ (El Mota7aresh Mogrim) is live!

It is a campaign to motivate people to take action and stand up to sexual harassment when they see it happen, so that we can start building a society where sexual harassment is not tolerated and harassers do not get away with their crime.

We launched with a press conference on Thursday May 21 at the Goethe Institute in downtown Cairo. The launch was covered by MBCMasr, Mada Masr, Youm 7, and others. Check out our video from the press conference here. 

The campaign is now running online on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Over the next week it will roll out on the streets in Cairo and other governorates around Egypt.

TV and radio ads will be aired on MBC Masr, CBC, El Nahar, Dream 2, and Radio Masr. Find the directors cut versions of the campaign ads here:

You can find more written information about the campaign on our website.”

 

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: campaign, Egypt, HarassMap

#SayHerName

May 22, 2015 By HKearl

Yesterday was the National Day of Action for Black Women and Girls. The African American Policy Forum (AAPF) release the report: “‪#‎SayHerName‬: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women” to help shed light on the extent of the issue.

From the AAPF website:

“Although Black women are routinely killed, raped and beaten by the police, their experiences are rarely foregrounded in popular understandings of police brutality,” said Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, Director of the African American Policy Forum and co-author of the brief. “Yet, inclusion of Black women’s experiences in social movements, media narratives and policy demands around policing and police brutality is critical to effectively combating racialized state violence for Black communities and other communities of color.”

#SayHerName gathers stories of Black women who have been killed by police and who have experienced gender-specific forms of police violence, provides some analytical frames for understanding their experiences, and broadens dominant conceptions of who experiences state violence and what it looks like…

In 2015 alone, several Black women’s lives have already been lost to police violence. For instance, just before Freddie Gray’s case grabbed national attention, police killed Mya Hall–a Black trans woman, on the outskirts of Baltimore. No action has been taken to date with respect to the officers responsible for her death. Most recently, police fatally shot Alexia Christian in the back of a police cruiser while she was handcuffed. And in Ventura, CA, Police officers fatally shot Meagan Hockaday–a young mother of three–within 20 seconds of entering her home in response to a domestic disturbance.

#SayHerName responds to increasing calls for attention to police violence against Black women by offering a resource to help ensure that Black women’s stories are integrated into demands for justice, policy responses to police violence, and media representations of victims and survivors of police brutality.”

There was a rally in New York City. Here is footage:

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Filed Under: race, Resources Tagged With: Sayhername

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