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10 Ways Individuals Can Join #EndSHWeek

March 24, 2015 By BPurdy

It can be hard to find your place in a movement when you’re not part of a bigger group or organization. At Stop Street Harassment, however, we value the participation of everyone, whether you’re a giant international nonprofit or just one person in a small town. And International Anti-Street Harassment Week is the perfect time to start getting involved. Here are some things you can do as an individual:

1)    Learn more – It’s cliché, but true: change starts with you. Are you curious about street harassment, but don’t really understand why it’s a big deal? Do you know your friends would ask questions if you started talking about it? Take a little time to look through our resources and toolkits, and you’ll be prepared to start a conversation wherever you go!

2)    Talk about it – This is probably the simplest thing you can do, but always important. Post your thoughts and opinions to Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram with the hashtags #EndSHWeek or #streetharassment. We want to hear from you! Don’t forget to change your profile picture or cover photo with one of our great graphics.  You can also participate in one of our many tweetchats and Google hang-outs scheduled throughout the week!

3)    Cover your neighborhood – Help yourself to our extensive collection of graphics and posters, in various languages. Print them out, hang them in coffee shops, libraries, telephone poles, or hand them out. Girls Speak has also developed an awesome series of posters and infographics meant for posting in public spaces – post and then share them with @GrlsSpeak and @NoStHarassWeek. Another easy way to get involved is to arm yourself with sidewalk chalk and cover the streets in positive or anti-harassment messages.

4)    Write it out – We know you have something important to say. Our movement is dedicated to sharing a wide variety of voices and perspectives – and that includes you! If you’re interested in writing a guest post, send it over to submit it here for consideration. Are you serious about getting your op-ed published in a paper? The first three submitted will receive complimentary editing and advice from our founder Holly Kearl. Also consider writing a letter to the editor at your local newspaper, independent or college publications, posting on your blog or social media and more. Join our virtual Write-In to receive daily writing prompts and tips on getting published!

5)    Join International Wheat Pasting Night – By now, many of us have seen and fallen in love with artist Tatyana Falalizadeh’s compelling Stop Telling Women to Smile images. On April 17th, she will be making these posters available to anyone who wants to participate by hanging them in their own towns! Stay tuned for more details on this.

6)    Join a local organization – Did you know that over 100 organizations in 30 countries are partnering up with us this year? Peruse our list and find someone in your area! Shoot them an email and consider showing up to an event or meeting. Are you a student? Reach out to a like-minded student club (feminist, womanist, LGBTQI+, social justice, etc.) and ask them if they’re involved with Anti-Street Harassment Week. If they’re not, give them some pointers on what they can do! Need help finding a group near you? Email bpurdy@stopstreetharassment.org and we’ll help you out.

7)    Create art – We think art is one of the most powerful tools in creating social change. Whether you’re painting a mural in the middle of town or sketching something out in your bedroom, we would love it if you shared with us so we can help you inspire others!

8)    Start your own organization – You’ll be surprised how many people are just looking for someone to start something. Start a campus club, meet with people at a downtown coffee shop, join together other people in your profession – whatever works for you. You know your town best – you’re the best person to make a change! Be sure to refer #2 to find tools that will help you start up.

9)    Join us year-round! – We’re a volunteer-driven organization, meaning we’re always in need of enthusiastic volunteers. If April is an especially crazy month for you, check out this list of ways you can get involved with Stop Street Harassment!

10) Donate – This is last on our list for a reason. We aren’t in this to make money – Anti-Street Harassment Week is about action, not dollar bills. However, we know that this is how some people prefer to help out. Your donation will help fund much-needed things like our website update and Safe Public Spaces Mentoring Program.

 

Questions? Email bpurdy@stopstreetharassment.org!

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, street harassment Tagged With: #EndSHWeek, individual, volunteer

Street Harassment Weekly – March 15-22

March 22, 2015 By BPurdy

Comment: Whistling and Staring at Women is Harassment – And It’s Got To Stop–  “According to research by the Australia Institute, 87% of us have experienced some form of physical or verbal street harassment, often before the age of 18. Internationally, this figure is higher, at 96%. While it may be tempting to dismiss such occurrences as “minor” or “harmless”, there is a substantial body of research that tells us this is not the case. The impacts of street harassment vary depending on the context, and range from the immediate, visceral responses of anger, repulsion and shock, through to longer-term effects such as anxiety, depression and, in some cases, post-traumatic stress disorder.”

TGI Friday’s Criticized for Parody of Viral CatCall Video – “”It is insulting to make a spoof of a person’s real trauma,” says Debjani Roy, the deputy director of Hollaback, which created the original video with Rob Bliss Creative. The founder of nonprofit Stop Street Harassment was “disgusted” that the restaurant chain was “trivializing the serious problem of street harassment just to sell appetizers.” “Their marketing team should know better,” Holly Kearl told the Daily News.”

Opinion: I Slapped My Harasser – So I’m a Bitch? – “The harm is the slippery slope that starts with something that might seem innocent, but actually perpetuates this idea that women exist only as objects for the enjoyment of men. It’s the slippery slope that starts with a man telling a woman to smile on the street and ends with him believing he’s allowed to pass judgment on every woman’s appearance. It’s the slippery slope that starts with catcalling and leads to ass grabbing and then maybe a girl is too drunk to consent, but the man who’s used to treating women like objects has sex with her anyway.”

Opinion: A Call to End Catcalling – “After a night out, I find myself holding my breath as I walk by groups of guys, just waiting for them to make an inappropriate comment. Granted, not every person catcalls; some do nothing more than drunkenly tell me to “have a good night.” However, it’s the other times that matter. It’s the times that my friends and I are outnumbered, and the guys think it’s a game to get our attention. It’s the times that guys continue yelling at us until we turn the next corner. It’s those times that make me scared of even the nice guys wishing me a good night.Before you catcall someone on spring break, no matter how little clothing they may be wearing, remember the threat you can possibly present and bite your tongue instead.”

Mobile Police Station to Check Eve-Teasing in the City –  “In the wake of rising cases of eve-teasing and crimes against women in the city, police on Monday decided to start “Shakti Mobile” – a mobile police station. The police team for the same will comprise of three male and three female officers and they will be on duty for 12 hours from 8 am to 8 pm every day. Each team will include a sub-inspector and four constables who will take rounds of the city on both two and four-wheelers. Even though this initiative was launched on trial basis in January this year, police has now decided to have more than one team for it.”

Hollaback! At Rape Culture – “And street harassment doesn’t just happen in big cities or in certain neighborhoods. It happens on campuses around the country—on our campus. A 2006 study by the American Association of University Women found that two-thirds of students had been harassed on campus. Harassment was common in residential areas (39 percent of respondents), outside on campus grounds (37 percent), in campus buildings (24 percent) and in classrooms (20 percent). While female students were more likely than their male counterparts to experience harassment outside on campus grounds, male students were more likely to experience harassment in residential spaces, bathrooms or locker rooms. At Duke, stories of harassment—whether at Shooters or in the classroom—are shockingly common.”

5 Ways to Make the Internet Safer, According to the Brilliant Panelists of SXSW2015– “Though men and women experience online harassment in similar amounts, the harassment women face tends to be more severe in nature, more often including sexual language, stalking, and death threats. It’s clear that the Internet is a minefield of abuse for women, but it can also be the site of productive conversation in which women’s voices certainly need to be heard. And in order to engage in those conversations without fear, the Internet needs to become a safer place for women. Here are some ways to make it that way.”

German Teen Launches Global Feminist Trend–  “Elonë Kastrati was sitting in a youth center in the hip Berlin district of Kreuzberg when something unusual caught her eye. There was a sanitary pad stuck to a window of the center, the 19-year-old student from Karlsruhe in Baden-Württemberg told The Local this week. “I started thinking about how society gets so offended by such normal things, pads,” Kastrati says.The idea then dawned on her to start an art project of sorts, to post the feminine hygiene products around town, labelled “with different messages pertaining to street harassment, sexual violence and sexism.”

This Woman Responds to Street Harassment in the Most Brilliant Way – “Brazilian resident Débora Adorno was tired of being harassed on the street and feeling powerless to do anything to stop it, so one day she decided to break out what she calls her “trademark toothy smile” (pulling back her lips and baring all her teeth). It worked!”

NPR Interview: Detained Feminists Highlight China’s Crackdown on Dissent – “In Beijing, five young feminist activists remain in detention nearly two weeks after they were first picked up by authorities. The women had been organizing a multi-city protest timed to International women’s Day. Their cause – bringing an end to sexual harassment on public transportation. They were planning to distribute stickers on buses and subway trains calling on police to do more.”

 

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Filed Under: weekly round up

Second Street Harassment Study in Chile

March 19, 2015 By BPurdy

Posted with the permission of Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero Chile

* New study shows that serious street harassment practices such as touching, exhibitionism and masturbation affect two in every five people on average.

* High percentage of citizens agree that sexual harassment in streets should be punished.

SANTIAGO, 19 March.- This week (March, 16th), at the former Congress, the Observatorio Cotra el Acoso Callejero – OCAC Chile (Observatory Against Street Harassment) presented the results of its second study, “Is Chile willing to punish street harassment? Study of characterization and opinion about street harassment and possible sanctions.”

Among the findings of the study, notes that three out of four people have suffered street harassment in Chile in the last 12 months, which means 75% of the population. In the case of women, the percentage reaches 85% and of men 55%.

The study also revealed that cases of street harassment are common: two in five people have suffered rubbing, touching or groping in public spaces, and 23% of women have experienced some form of serious harassment (persecution, exhibitionism, public masturbation).

Regarding the perception of the public on this issue, the results show that 84% of people totally disapprove any practice of harassment, whether “compliments”, groping or exhibitionism.

Another surprising fact was the boldness of the result of the question “Are you willing to punish street harassment?”. The answer was a resounding yes: over 90% of people said they would sanction any for of street harassment. What, in the Observatory’s opinion, demonstrates the need to legislate.

“This study reinforces our policy action: analyze a type of violence that has been naturalized and do not accept to have 12 years old girls who need to be “used to street harassment. The results of our second study demonstrate that we are facing a significant social change, Chileans think street harassment is harmful and should be punished”, said María José Guerrero, sociologist and parti of the OCAC Chile’s Studies team.

To conduct this study, OCAC Chile was sponsored by UN Women and European Union.

 

Press contacts

Observatorio contra el Acoso Callejero (OCAC)
Javiera Contreras
comunicaciones@ocacchile.org
+569 8136 7869

Programa de Fortalecimiento de Organizaciones de la Sociedad Civil que Promueven la Igualdad de Género ONU Mujeres – Unión European
Mónica Maureira M.
maureira.monica@gmail.com
+569 9959 4156

 

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Filed Under: News stories, Resources Tagged With: chile, OCAC, Santiago, study, survey

OCAC Chile presents New Bill to Congress

March 19, 2015 By BPurdy

Posted with the permission of Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero Chile

VALPARAISO, 17 March.- In the month of International Women’s Day and the UN CSW 59th, which discusses the status of women in the world, Chile advances in the struggle for gender equality. In order to remove street harassment from the bad number of violence complaints, as well as prevent future attacks and protect victims, the Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero Chile – OCAC Chile (Observatory Against Street Harassment), Tuesday, presented to Congress the Bill “Law for Street Respect”, which seeks to enroll street harassment in Chilean law.

The project is divided into four main areas: it defines what is understood as street harassment, defines what acts shall constitute a minor offense, incorporates into the Penal Code the offense of street harassment and proposes alternative measures with an educational focus. In parallel, OCAC Chile submitted to the Executive power a set of recommendations to promote educational and preventive public policy, and thus not merely criminalize the problem.

“We believe that the Law for Street Respect is a vital step towards a more friendly and safe public space for everyone. This will be a tool that will prevent attacks and protect victims, besides having a preventive, educational and committed to gender equity approach”, said Maria Francisca Valenzuela, President of OCAC Chile.

The document is sponsored by the deputies Camila Vallejo (PC) and Karla Rubilar (Amplitud) and was signed by parliamentarians of cross militancy, as Giorgio Jackson (Independiente-RD), Daniella Cicardini (PS), Loreto Carvajal (PPD) Marcela Sabat (RN), Karol Cariola (PC), Vlado Mirosevic (Liberal), Yasna Provost (DC) and Gabriel Boric (Self-IA).

“It is important to legislate on street assaults so they do not become naturalized, since in an almost imperceptibly way they can affect psychologically who is the subject of such aggression. I hope we can have a transverse support this motion,” said Santiago’s  deputy, Giorgio Jackson.

For its part, the parliamentary Camila Vallejo, sponsor of the bill, said that “every day, women of all ages, regardless of socioeconomic status, are discriminated against and abused physically or psychologically. Laws like this are intended to assert our struggle for gender equality, for recognition of our humanity, so often trampled and abused”.

To develop this initiative, OCAC Chile had the support of UN Women and the European Union. If passed the law, Chile would join countries like Peru, and various nations of Europe which have already moved towards regulations that address, prevent and punish this form of violence.

For more information, OCAC has developed the respetocallejero.cl website, where you can download the full bill, review an explanatory video and read testimonials about street harassment in Chile.

Video with english subtitles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mm2cQ8wixPc&feature=youtu.be

Press Contacts

Observatory Against Street Harassment (OCAC Chile)

Javiera Contreras
comunicaciones@ocacchile.org
+569 8136 7869

Program to Strengthen Civil Society Organizations that Promote Gender Equality UN Women – European Union
Monica M. Maureira
maureira.monica@gmail.com
+569 9959 4156

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: chile, International Women's Day, IWD2015, OCAC, Valparaiso

Street Harassment Weekly – Feb. 16-22

February 23, 2015 By BPurdy

Gurgaon Administration Mulling “Women-Only” Cabs– “With the aim to curb incidents of eve-teasing and crime against women, the Gurgaon district administration is planning to run ‘women only’ cabs in the industrial city that will be driven by women drivers. The administration will help interested women to buy and run such cabs. The Gurgaon district administration has asked the RUDSET (Rural Development and Self-Employment Training Institute) to identify such women or girls who are willing to run such cabs.”

Podcast: Reality Cast – Street Harassment in Mexico City, and MRAs take on “Frozen”– “On this episode of Reality Cast, I’ll cover a street art protest against sexual harassment, the return of the Republican rape philosophers, and ask the question: Is the movie Frozen oppressing men? During the interview section of this podcast, I’ll dig more into the “Stop Telling Women to Smile” project.”

Video: The Inconvenienced Cat-Caller – “My sketch, “Inconvenienced Catcaller” was inspired by a time I heard someone catcalling me. When I turned around, I saw that the catcaller was behind the counter at a bodega more than two blocks away. He was literally screaming over a two-block radius, inside his own store, just to harass me. I couldn’t believe he was going through that great of an effort simply to be an ass. I made this sketch about a catcaller that will push through anything to get in that sweet, sweet catcall.”

Women in Turkey Share Devastating Stories of Sexual Harassment in #Sendeanlat Twitter Campaign– “In thousands of devastating tweets, women in Turkey are sharing their experiences of sexual harassment and abuse in the wake of the brutal killing of a young Turkish woman…The 20-year-old psychology student’s murder prompted huge rallies across Turkey this weekend to protest violence against women, The Guardian reported, and the public outcry over her death also played out on social media.”

Sexist Remarks, Stalking, and Rape Threats: How Women are Punished For Speaking Online – “Online violence can be distinguished by the swiftness with which abuse is republished, replicated and stored, but it is a continuation of what women face offline. Imagine the experience of a woman walking down the road. Stares. Lewd remarks. Gropes. Assault. These expressions of violence together send her a clear message: the street is not hers, and if she enters it, this is the punishment she must bear.”

Iowa State University Student Seriously Injured After Intervening in Street Harassment – “At the end of the day, why do men harass women, and why do men assault other men who challenge those sexist or disrespectful behaviors? We have to have a conversation with our young men about this. I had three of my daughters go to Iowa State. I would have hoped if something like this had happened to one of them that someone like him would have stepped in.”

When Street Harassers Are the Only Ones Calling You Beautiful– “The truth is that women of color are disproportionally affected by street harassment – often, we’re victimized not just for being women, but for being Black.I’ve had men of all races ask me to ignore harassment from Black men for the sake of Black male lives, while Black women are abused and even killed for being Black and woman. But I’ll never understand why anyone believes I could possibly choose between my gender and my race. For me, there is no separating Black from woman. It is intrinsic to our identity and everything we’ve ever known about street harassment.”

USA: Dear Men of New York – “I am more than my body. I don’t owe you a smile, a thank you, or a hello. I am not a bitch for ignoring you. I don’t deserve your street-abuse just because I don’t give you my attention or affection.”

 

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Filed Under: street harassment, weekly round up

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