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Hiring a Social Media Manager for #EndSHWeek

January 29, 2016 By HKearl

Stop Street Harassment is hosting the 6th annual International Anti-Street Harassment Week from April 10-16, 2016.

Description:

We are hiring a part-time social media manager to oversee the Twitter and Facebook accounts specific to the week, as well as the SSH twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest, and Instagram accounts. The person will also manage some of the tweet chats held during the week.

The person will report to SSH founder Holly Kearl and will participate in short, 15 minute weekly staff calls.

This is a remote job and the applicant can be based anywhere as long as they have a reliable daily Internet connection.

Time Period:

Feb. 16 to April 16, 2016.

Hours:

Approximately 5 hours per week, with up to 10 hours during the week before and during the week of International Anti-Street Harassment Week.

Pay:

A stipend of $1,000.

Applying:

Please send a cover letter detailing your social media experience and why you would be interested in this position. Include links to your personal accounts and/or other accounts you manage. Please also send a resume/CV.  E-mail the information to Holly Kearl, hkearl @ stopstreetharassment.org.

Deadline:

Please apply by midnight E.S.T on Feb. 5, 2016.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, SSH programs

Join the 2016 Week of Awareness

January 26, 2016 By HKearl

NotaComplimentDear Friends,

Already two women have been killed by street harassers this year. I am furious.

I routinely receive stories to the Stop Street Harassment blog from teenage girls, usually saying grown men harassed them. I am outraged.

I still face street harassment myself on occasion, including on my wedding day. It’s upsetting and humiliating.

Nearly 10 years after I began writing my master’s thesis on this topic, I am still angry and I am still organizing.

If you want to take action, I invite you to join our 6th annual Meet Us On The Street: International Anti-Street Harassment Week of action, April 10-16, 2016.

Take whatever action you want and, collectively, help us make the world take notice of this issue!

** Does your organization want to co-sponsor the week in 2016 (requirements: advertise the week to your networks and participate)? Contact me at HKearl@stopstreetharassment.org.

Do you know what you’re going to do for the week? Submit your event details using this form. **

In solidarity,

Holly

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week

#16Days of Activism: Street Demonstration (Day 6)

November 30, 2015 By HKearl

Nov. 25 – Dec. 10 are the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence. To commemorate the week, we are featuring 1 activism idea per day. This information is excerpted from my new book Stop Global Street Harassment: Growing Activism Around the World (Praeger 2015).

Initiating a street demonstration by holding signs with anti-harassment messages, asking people to write their own messages, and facilitating impromptu conversations are additional tactics growing in popularity among people wishing to challenge street harassment in their community. These types of actions have taken place in many countries, including Jordan, Egypt, Chile, India, and the United States.

Human chain in Jordan. Image via Al Bawaba
Human chain in Jordan. Image via Al Bawaba

In June 2012, more than 200 people in Amman, Jordan, formed a “human chain” from Al Hussein Sports City to the Interior Ministry Circle to protest various gender-based crimes, including street harassment, the practice of forcing rape survivors to marry their rapists, and honor killings. Women and men of all ages stood in a row, each holding signs that condemned these acts and called for behavioral changes and changes to laws. Weeks later in Egypt, the Nefsi (I Hope) anti-sexual harassment campaign also organized scores of people into a human chain along a busy road in Cairo. Some of the participants’ signs read “I wish I could ride a bike without anyone bothering me” and “I wish you would respect me as I respect you.”

Chile

In 2014, Observatorio Contra el Acoso Callejero en Chile held an open outdoor meeting at a plaza where more than two dozen women and men of all ages discussed street harassment, passed out pamphlets to passersby, and wrote anti-street harassment messages on signs like “Mi cuerpo no es un objeto” (“My body is not an object”) and “Yo me visto para mi no para ti” (“I dress for me not for you”). They held the signs for passersby to see and then attached them to strings hung around the plaza. They also attached small ribbons on which they had written their street harassment experiences, and people walking by stopped to read them.

India

In Bangalore, India, members of the volunteer group Jhatkaa spent a day in 2014 walking around the streets of the city with a whiteboard and asking women to write down their experiences with street harassment. People were eager to participate and wrote statements like, “Lots of times men have pinched my breasts and made passes at me on the buses,” “Been whistled and stared at wearing a pair of jeans,” and “The creepy stare.” The organizers wrote in a summary of their event: “Many women thanked us for doing it and told us they felt lighter after speaking about it and participating in fighting against it. On seeing photos of other women and their experiences-they also felt good knowing that they weren’t the only ones. We shared these photos on Facebook and Twitter and received positive comments for the work.”

Philadelphia, USA

Since 2011, Philadelphia-based groups like FAAN Mail and Feminist Public Works have held a demonstration in the spring. It includes drumming, chalking, and posting flyers and signs and discussing street harassment with passersby. In 2014, they framed it as reclaiming public space at LOVE Park and hosted chalking, street theater, music, art making, and double Dutch jump rope. People could write their answers to complete the phrase “A Safe Street is …,” and several chose to publicly share their street harassment stories while standing on a “soap box.” Around 50 people participated. “This year’s action in Philadelphia was our most dynamic action yet,” wrote FAAN Mail co-founder Nuala Cabral in a report of the event. We offered several activities that enabled people to reclaim public space and address this problem in creative ways. Children were a part of the event. Male allies stood with us. It was a beautiful day.”

Help fund our work in 2016, donate to our end-of-year giving campaign!

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Filed Under: 16 days, anti-street harassment week, street harassment Tagged With: chile, India, jordan, street demonstration, usa

#16Days of Activism: More Global Action (Day 1)

November 25, 2015 By HKearl

Nov. 25 – Dec. 10 are the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence. To commemorate the week, we will feature 1 activism idea per day, starting tomorrow.

Today, I wanted to express gratitude and acknowledgement that gender-based street harassment, or sexual violence in public spaces, is gaining much more widespread recognition as a problem. Here are two examples from this year that clearly illustrate this.

1. In April groups in 41 countries took action in support of safe public spaces through our International Anti-Street Harassment Week, from Australia to Zimbabwe and dozens of countries in between. You can view photos and read a recap (and plan to join us April 10-16, 2016!). It’s heartening to see so many people dedicate time and energy to this cause.

EndSHWeekpostcard2016

2. UN Women hosted a Safe Cities Global Leaders’ Forum in June, and 140 people from 24 countries gathered in Delhi, India, to share ideas about the best strategies to address sexual violence in public spaces. Attendees included government officials, grassroots women, researchers, and staff from UN agencies that are implementing programs that form part of the agency’s Safe Cities Global Initiative (SCGI).

The SCGI works with local organizations and governments to tackle sexual harassment and other forms of sexual violence in public spaces. Launched in New Delhi in November 2010 with five cities, it now includes 22 cities. Representatives from these cities, as well as from other groups working on safe cities work, were present at the forum.

Read the wrap-up report.

SafeCitiesForumIndia-cropped

For too long, street harassment has been seen as normal, no big deal, or the fault of harassed persons. Those attitudes are quickly falling away and in their place are thousands of people worldwide who are dedicating time, energy, and expertise to making public places safer for everyone. For that, I am grateful.

Help fund our work in 2016, donate to our end-of-year giving campaign!

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Filed Under: 16 days, anti-street harassment week, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: 16 days of activism, gender-based violence, global efforts, UN women

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

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