• About Us
    • What Is Street Harassment?
    • Why Stopping Street Harassment Matters
    • Meet the Team
      • Board of Directors
      • Past Board Members
    • In The Media
  • Our Work
    • National Street Harassment Hotline
    • International Anti-Street Harassment Week
    • Blog Correspondents
      • Past SSH Correspondents
    • Safe Public Spaces Mentoring Program
    • Publications
    • National Studies
    • Campaigns against Companies
    • Washington, D.C. Activism
  • Our Books
  • Donate
  • Store

Stop Street Harassment

Making Public Spaces Safe and Welcoming

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Home
  • Blog
    • Harassment Stories
    • Blog Correspondents
    • Street Respect Stories
  • Help & Advice
    • National Street Harassment Hotline
    • Dealing With Harassers
      • Assertive Responses
      • Reporting Harassers
      • Bystander Responses
      • Creative Responses
    • What to Do Before or After Harassment
    • Street Harassment and the Law
  • Resources
    • Definitions
    • Statistics
    • Articles & Books
    • Anti-Harassment Groups & Campaigns
    • Male Allies
      • Educating Boys & Men
      • How to Talk to Women
      • Bystander Tips
    • Video Clips
    • Images & Flyers
  • Take Community Action
  • Contact

Important Anti-Street Harassment Week Update – 2020 is FINAL Year

June 2, 2019 By HKearl

April marked the 9th year of International Anti-Street Harassment Week!  Read the new wrap-up report and view the photos of actions that were taken in over 30 countries!

In 2011, when I decided we needed a dedicated time each year for groups and people across the world to speak out together against street harassment, I didn’t envision how many groups/people that would entail across the next nine years, or that entities like the UN, Oxfam and PLAN International and government agencies would join in. It’s breathtaking.

I also didn’t know how many hundreds of hours I’d spend to run the Week. This is the 9th year that I managed the Week unpaid, while simultaneously working a day job. This year, I also needed to parent a one-year-old with health issues who was about to have his 4th and  5th surgeries, so I couldn’t put as much time into it as I had in prior years (I am typing this at 6 a.m. on a Sunday while he sleeps). Last year, I was two weeks away from giving birth and very sick while overseeing it and so I also did less than in previous years.  The year before that, I unexpectedly was in the midst of an IVF process and had an egg extraction on the last day of the Week — I was RT-ing and sharing people’s actions from the hospital room before I went under anesthesia.

I care about this issue so much that I’ve continued to organize and speak out even when I’ve had to juggle these huge, personal-life issues (and a day job).

Even before the personal challenges of recent years, each year I always feel so exhausted from preparing for and overseeing the Week that I think,  “This is the last year I’m doing it.”

But, then, each year, I feel exhilarated by the amazing actions that have taken place and the solidarity and awareness-raising it inspires. I am in awe by the creativity of groups who are involved and the dedication to the issue exhibited by people worldwide. The positives of the Week have always outweighed the toll it takes on me and my life, so each year, I decide, “Okay, I can oversee it one more time.”

And I do.

This year, I’ve made a new decision. It truly is untenable for me to keep overseeing the Week indefinitely, especially unpaid, so the action in 2020 — which will be the 10th consecutive year of global action — will be the last. Ending International Anti-Street Harassment Week at a decade feels right, and I am so proud of all that we as a community have achieved across that time.

I hope you will mark your calendars for the final year of action – let’s close out the decade of global activism with a splash! Join us from April 19-25, 2020.

Share

Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, SSH programs, street harassment

Visit the Monument Quilt This Weekend

May 30, 2019 By HKearl

 

The square I made for the monument quilt in 2014!

DC-area folks, the Monument Quilt on the National Mall is here this weekend! It’s been 6+ years in the making, and I made my square as an ally in 2014!! I also wrote an article about it for the Women’s Media Center that year. 

“The Monument Quilt, a project of Baltimore based FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture, is a collection of over 3,000 stories by survivors of sexual and intimate partner violence and our allies, written, painted, and stitched onto red fabric. Our stories literally blanket highly public, outdoor places to create and demand space to heal, and resist a singular narrative about sexual violence. The culminating display is coming up May 31 – June 2, 2019, on the National Mall in Washington, DC. This will be the only time that the quilt will be viewed in its entirety.”
Location: National Mall, between 10th and 15th streets; Fri., 1-9 p.m., Sat., 9 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., free.

Read a Washington Post article about it.

Share

Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: force, metoo, monument quilt, survivors

New Statewide Study on Sexual Harassment and Assault in California

May 23, 2019 By HKearl

Following up on our latest national research about sexual harassment (including street harassment) and sexual assault, here is a statewide report on California.

The headline figure is that statewide, 86% of women and 53% of men reported experiencing some form of sexual harassment and/or assault in their lifetime.

When we looked specifically at sexual harassment across all public spaces, 77% of women and 35% of men had experienced it. Read the full report here!

CALCASA and UCSD Center on Gender Equity and Health (GEH), took the lead on the statewide study, with support from SSH, RALIANCE, and Promundo.

Share

Filed Under: Resources, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: california, study

Take Our Survey on Street Harassment and Age

May 9, 2019 By HKearl

Recently, I’ve read a few street harassment stories in which women recount their first experiences of street harassment at ages as young as 11. Their harassers? Older teenagers or adult men. Based on the hundreds of stories I’ve read and heard over the years, I know this is pretty typical and pretty alarming.

I hope that if more people realized the predatory nature of so much street harassment — adult men preying on teenagers (and younger) — there would be much more outcry and efforts to try to stop it.

To that end, since our latest national studies (2018, 2019) show that a public space is the most frequent site for sexual harassment, I have created an informal survey for YOU to take about your first street harassment experience. How old were you? How old was your harasser? How did it affect you?

I anticipate using the results in blog posts, articles, factsheets and talks going forward. Anyone, anywhere is welcome to complete this short survey. Your answers will be anonymous, but you can choose to leave your email address at the end if you’d like to be contacted with the results.

THANK YOU!

Related, check out this op-ed at Essence penned by Girls For Gender Equity‘s CEO and our ally Joanne N. Smith, “#MeToo Isn’t Just for Adults.”

And if you missed it, be sure to check out (and share) our latest national study from April 30! Full Report | Two-Page Executive Summary | Press Release | Survey Questions | Street Harassment Factsheet

Share

Filed Under: Resources, SSH programs, Stories, street harassment Tagged With: age, research, survey

Our Latest Research is Out Now!

April 30, 2019 By HKearl

To close out Sexual Assault Awareness Month, on April 30, 2019, SSH, UCSD Center on Gender Equity and Health (GEH), RALIANCE, CALCASA and Promundo released a new joint national study.

NORC at the University of Chicago conducted the nationally representative survey of 1,182 women and 1,037 men across February – March 2019. They used the using the AmeriSpeak Panel. UCSD’s GEH did the data analysis.

READ: Full Report | Two-Page Executive Summary | Press Release | Survey Questions | Street Harassment Factsheet

Our findings include:

  • 81% of women and 43% of men reported experiencing some form of sexual harassment and/or assault in their lifetime. This graph shows the breakdown of the main categories:

  • The most frequently was listed location for sexual harassment is a public space, while most sexual assault takes place in private homes or residences.
    • 68% of women and 23% of men experienced sexual harassment at a public place like a street, store, park or restaurant. When you include mass transit and nightlife venues, that statistic rises to 71% women and 28% men. In other words, nearly all women who had experienced sexual harassment and/or assault had experienced it in public spaces (as well as perhaps other locations).
  • Sexual harassment and assault cause people, especially women, to feel anxiety or depression and prompt them to change their route or regular routine.
  • While experiences of sexual harassment and assault are highly prevalent, accusations of sexual harassment and assault are very rare.
  • Most people who said they committed sexual harassment also said they had experienced sexual harassment.

While we repeated a few questions from our 2018 survey, we chose to add new questions around false accusations this year in light of the Kavanaugh hearing and Betsy DeVos’s efforts to change Title IX guidelines.

We broke down differences by demographics and included the findings that were statistically significant. For instance:

  • 35% of Black women had experienced sexual harassment in the previous six months.
  • 35% of women with disabilities experienced sexual assault in their lifetime.
  • 95% of lesbian/bisexual women experienced some form of sexual harassment in their lifetime.

Check out the full report!

Thank you to all of our donors who made this report possible!

Share

Filed Under: disabilities, LGBTQ, national study, News stories, online harassment, public harassment, race, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: metoo, national study, research

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Share Your Story

Share your street harassment story for the blog. Donate Now

From the Blog

  • #MeToo 2024 Study Released Today
  • Join International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2022
  • Giving Tuesday – Fund the Hotline
  • Thank You – International Anti-Street Harassment Week 2021
  • Share Your Story – Safecity and Catcalls Collaboration

Buy the Book

  • Contact
  • Events
  • Join Us
  • Donate
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Stop Street Harassment · Website Design by Sarah Marie Lacy