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Meet our 2014 Safe Public Spaces Mentees!

August 22, 2014 By HKearl

I am thrilled to see our Safe Public Spaces Mentoring Program grow so much this year. Last year, for the pilot we received 5 applications and took on 3 sites. This year, we received 15 really great applications from all over the world. Thanks to donations from our supporters, we have been able to accept six of them! They are in six countries and four continents. GLOBAL!

Through December 15, we will hold weekly check-ins, offer advice, materials and a small monetary stipend for the projects they proposed. Each team will write at least two blog posts about their projects (mid-way and at the conclusion) so you all will have a chance to hear from them directly.

These are the mentees and their projects!

1. Schools of Equality in Chennai, India, will create toolkits, in both English and Tamil, to educate and raise awareness about street harassment among teens in schools. The toolkit will also contain resources for schools to conduct their own campaigns around ending street harassment along with ways to brainstorm culturally appropriate responses to street harassment.

2. In Kenya, the Teen Watch Centre will address the rampant problem of harassment on their local ferry system, which 5,000 people ride each day, through a five day awareness campaign on the boarding ramps and a sticker and poster campaign.

3. Women LEAD Nepal will recruit 10 volunteers in Kathmandu and train them to lead theater forums on street harassment. Then the volunteers will go into schools, universities and public spaces to perform the theater and a workshop to allow people to learn about the topic and have a safe space to discuss it.

4. In Managua, Nicaragua, the new group Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero Nicaragua (OCAC NIC) will conduct surveys about street harassment at six of the busiest buses stations. They hope to survey at least 2,000 people and have volunteers ready to analyze the data. Then they will do outreach to media outlets to publicize the findings and bring more attention to the issue.

5. In Nis, Serbia, the informal youth group Generation Y will conduct a street harassment survey among high school and college students. Then, they will use the information they collect to design informational flyers about street harassment and they will do flyering and outreach at places found to be high-risk for harassment based on the survey results.

6. In Kansas City, MO, USA, the BikeWalkKC team will work to pass a cyclist anti-harassment ordinance and hold workshops on street harassment and bicycling.

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Filed Under: SSH programs, street harassment

I met the woman who caught the Boston Up-Skirter and changed history

August 21, 2014 By HKearl

Remember early this spring when up-skirt photos were ruled to be legal by the Massachusetts Supreme Court and a few days later, the legislature changed the law?

Well, yesterday it was my great honor to randomly meet the Boston transit authority detective who made that all happen. She attended my workshop on addressing harassment on public transportation at the National Sexual Assault Conference and introduced herself afterward.

She said she and another female detective periodically go undercover as “grope bait.” As they’d gotten a few reports about a man taking upskirt photos on the subway line that lots of college students ride, she and her partner went undercover to look for him. This was in 2010. They found him and he had the nerve to take video footage up their skirts. They couldn’t believe it was happening. They arrested him.

He was a lawyer named Michael Robertson and his wife is a lawyer and he chose to use the law to challenge the charges against him. And after his case took a few years to go through the various levels of appeals, he almost got away with it at the Supreme Court level. Except that when the general public found out, we were outraged and instead of him getting away with it, his lawsuit led to the Massachusetts legislature changing the law.

The detective I talked to was very modest. She downplayed her role, even though when I and another woman in our conversation asked her, “He wouldn’t have been caught without you, right?” she said right. But she still downplayed it.

I think she is a hero! Who wants to go out and be grope bait for entitled creeps?  It’s a tough, rough job. She and her partner are making a big difference, as is the whole Boston transit authority. They have led the way in our country for transit agencies to take this issue seriously. Several cities – including DC – now have campaigns, but they had it first, in 2008.

And Boston isn’t the only transit system employing undercover cops to curb harassment and assault. In Bogota, 20 days ago the transit authority launched an undercover “pervert police” that has already arrested 16 men.

I wonder, will any other cities follow suit?

 (I asked if I could have my photo taken with her as I was so excited to meet her, but she declined as she “doesn’t like photos of herself.”)

 

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Filed Under: street harassment

National Sexual Assault Conference 2014

August 20, 2014 By HKearl

I’m at the National Sexual Assault Conference in Pittsburgh today to present the workshop “Getting Public Transit Systems to Address Sexual Harassment/Assault” with one of my mentors and long-time, amazing activists, Marty Langelan.

We’re looking forward to a lot of important conversations and hope we can see anti-harassment campaigns on transit systems spread nation-wide!

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Filed Under: Events

USA: Exercising Outdoors While Female

August 20, 2014 By Correspondent

Lorna M. Hartman, Spokane, WA, SSH Blog Correspondent

Image via Shooting Truth Bullets

The discussion has begun on the street harassment women experience when they exercise outdoors. Articles here, here and here (one by our own Holly Kearl here at SSH) describe this type of harassment, and plenty more are a Google search away.

Yet the pushback against this aspect of harassment is considerable. Exhibit A is the comment section of any article on street harassment of women exercising in public spaces.

Kearl’s article cited above gets this gem: “v9988, I don’t make cat calls towards woman and I don’t condone it. On a list of problems that a person could have, cat calls should be near the bottom. If common cat calls bother her then she should grow a thicker skin … She should be happy that she has the ability to run and is pretty enough to get a cat call once in a while. I used to run when I was younger and as a straight man I did not enjoy the occasional cat call that I got from men but it was no big deal.”

A couple of comments down, the attitude continues: “Wait til you lose your looks, become middle aged and the male attention stops. Then you’ll really have something to complain about. Lighten up honey. Not every woman considers a wolf whistle dangerous harassment. Geez. Lemme guess, you majored in ‘Wymyn’s Studies’ in college. Men are the enemy!”

Several more comments down there’s this excerpt: “If you choose to just run along the side of the road in spandex or tight shorts, you will receive catcalls. That is just human nature.”

A 2012 article titled “Running With Breasts: Why Won’t Men Leave Me Alone When I’m Jogging?” by Philadelphia writer Erica Palan describes her experiences jogging in public areas. First comment: “Another woman complaining about her boobs! There doesn’t seem to be one woman on this planet who likes her own boobs (or anyone else’s) … ” and it goes downhill for several paragraphs.

Writer Maghen Nicole says, “As a young, female cyclist, my safety and right to access transportation with dignity has been compromised by traffic and pedestrians,” in her article “Harassing Me While I’m Biking Is Still Street Harassment” published in mid-August this year.

She goes on to say, ““Street harassment is yet another way for men to exert their power over women, far too often without question or consequence. Cyclists have had enough. Women have had enough … cases as extreme as passengers in cars reaching out to touch and grab women biking have been reported … women have reported men making uncomfortable and offensive comments about the way they were seated on their bikes.”

Her article was met with responses such as:

* “Should you be harassed no. Is cat calling really so bad that it makes you feel un-safe? If it does make you feel that way you better just stay home with your mommy while she cooks you din-din”
* “So much women’s studies jargon just to complain about someone saying something to you.”
* “Words are words; learn to be an adult and not some sniveling 12 year old … Now it’s ‘Sticks & stones will break my bones; Words will devastate my inner child, because I’m sniveling cry baby!’”

A blogger named Mountaineer created a Twitter handle called @offsideplays where women can share their experiences of being harassed while bicycling.

She wrote, “Since I created Offside Plays (@offsideplays) as a site to expose the everyday discrimination (e.g. racism, sexism, homophobia etc.) that takes place in sport and exercise nothing has caught my attention more than the harassment that women face while biking … I am consistently surprised by the amount and type of harassment/abuse faced by women on their bikes.”

How do we raise the social and legal costs of harassing outdoor exercisers simply for being female in a public space?

* Push back verbally if it’s safe to do so—both men and women can do this.
* Report physical contact by harassers to police, whether it happens to you or whether you observed it happening to someone else. A harasser moving into someone’s physical space and touching them is breaking the law.
* Advocate for police to have training on what street harassment really is and what it’s really like, and expect police to follow it up when you report a physical assault or stalking situation.
* Press charges when we have opportunity to do so, if we can afford it financially and emotionally.
* Share your stories with friends and family. It gives them the choice: They can either voice their support, or lose the ability to be in denial.

Post your stories to public online places like @offsideplays, the Hollaback website and Hollaback iPhone and Droid apps, following Twitter account @EndStHarassment and tweets tagged #endstreetharassment, following and submitting your stories to StopStreetHarassment and Fuck You Street Harassment on Tumblr, and many more.

There’s a lot of work to do before women exercising outdoors are treated with the respect due to any human being. But we are doing the work, and we can achieve the goal with perseverance.

Lorna is raising three young, kindhearted male allies and has worked on rape and interpersonal violence since the 1990s, including serving on the local rape hotline, answering calls, and driving to emergency rooms to advocate for victims and connect them with resources they needed.

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Filed Under: correspondents, Stories, street harassment

Street Harassment is NOT a compliment

August 19, 2014 By HKearl

I am really floored that after the NY Post published an article about street harassment being flattering (and women should just deal with it), major outlets like USA Today, Time and Salon.com all ran pieces this afternoon disagreeing, as did sites like Bustle, the Frisky,

This would never have happened a few years ago, hell maybe not even last year. This is an incredible shift in how street harassment is viewed!! WOW. Let’s keep speaking out!

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

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SSH will not publish any comment that is offensive or hateful and does not add to a thoughtful discussion of street harassment. Racism, homophobia, transphobia, disabalism, classism, and sexism will not be tolerated. Disclaimer: SSH may use any stories submitted to the blog in future scholarly publications on street harassment.
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