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UN Women march and campus talks

March 9, 2015 By HKearl

Yesterday, I walked with members of the Brazil anti-street harassment group Chega de Fiu Fiu and our ally Ben of Voices of Men in the UN Women’s International Women’s Day march in New York City…. because street harassment is an issue we must address globally if we want to see equality for women!!

On Saturday, our board member Lindsey Middlecamp led a workshop on street harassment at Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota. She was thrilled by the attendance and engagement of the students.

And on Wednesday, I met with a senior seminar class at Shenandoah University to talk about street harassment, activism, and a career in the non-profit world. We also strategized ways to deal with harassers both on and off their campus.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Events, SSH programs, street harassment

New Study: Street Harassment in Australia

March 9, 2015 By HKearl

The findings are very similar to other regions of the world.

Via The Observer:

“The survey of 1426 females found 87% were verbally or physically attacked while walking down the street and men were responsible for 52% of the attacks. 40% of women feel unsafe in their own neighbourhoods at night…In addition to verbal harassment, physical street harassment is also a relatively commonplace occurrence, with 65% of women experiencing physically threatening harassment. One third of women had been kissed without their consent and a quarter of women report being threatened after rejecting the sexual advances of a stranger.””

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment

CSW and International Women’s Day 2015

March 8, 2015 By HKearl

Happy International Women’s Day! This is an important opportunity each year for raising awareness about issue that particularly affect women, such as street harassment.

As the author of this Time magazine article notes, we’ve made a lot of progress in the past few decades regarding the education of girls, women’s access to water, women’s leadership, and maternal mortality. BUT there are still gaps in these areas and HUGE gaps in areas like gender-based violence. So as always, there is a lot more work to do.

The day coincides with the start of UN’s annual Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in New York City and I am en route to attend the NGO CSW Consultation Day today. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director, UN Women, will be one of the speakers and panelists from around the world will talk about the UN/international women’s movement from 1975-1995, the 1995 Beijing conference on women’s rights, what’s happened in the 20 years since then, and what comes next.

Starting at UN headquarters, an International Women’s Day march took place, concluding at Times Square around 4:30 p.m.

International Women's Day March
International Women’s Day March

Tomorrow I have various meetings — including at the UN — and also will attend the No Ceilings Full Participation Report release. From the event press release:

“The report is the culmination of a year-long, global data aggregation effort by the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, in collaboration with The Economist Intelligence Unit, UCLA WORLD Policy Analysis Center and Fathom Information Design. The report identifies the significant gains women and girls have made – and the gaps that still remain – since the U.N. Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995, when Secretary Clinton called on the international community to ensure “women’s rights are human rights.” Benchmarking process since that landmark event, No Ceilings is making the data open and accessible, and is pairing the report with an interactive, shareable collection of data visualizations. The data visualizations will highlight key findings from the data through interactive stories, as well as allow users the ability to explore the data on their own.”

Speakers will include Hillary and Chelsea Clinton, Melinda Gates, Her Excellency Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of the Republic of Liberia, Her Excellency Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, President of the Republic of Croatia, Malala Yousafzai, and Sheryl WuDunn.

I will tweet during (or soon after) the events (@hkearl) and blog about them on Tuesday, so stay tuned. 

CSW will last about two weeks and the parallel events hosted by NGOs are free and open to the public if you’re in the area and want to attend.

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Filed Under: Events, Resources, street harassment Tagged With: commission on the status of women, CSW, International Women's Day, IWD, UN

International Women’s Day Tweetathon

March 8, 2015 By HKearl

Our friends Sayfty in India are hosting a 24-hour tweetathon for International Women’s Day 2015. We are hosting the 4 – 4:55 p.m. EDT on Monday, March 9.

Use the hashtags #Sayfty4women #IWD2015 to participate.

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Filed Under: street harassment

Why researchers should focus on street harassment

March 7, 2015 By HKearl

Our board member Dr. Laura S. Logan, an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Hastings College, wrote “Street Harassment: Current and Promising Avenues for Researchers and Activists” for the current issue of the academic journal Sociology Compass. In it she makes the case for why researchers in particular need to focus on street harassment. A short exceprt follows, here is the full article.

“…researchers should focus on street harassment for several reasons…because it is on a continuum of violence against and oppression of femininities and the people associated with femininities. It is also on a continuum of violence against people of color, particularly when we consider institutional racism and the risks of criminalization associated with being in public space if one is, for instance, a Black man or woman. Street harassment is part of a larger culture that values in deed if not always in word men’s sexually predatory behaviors, sexual assault against women and children, women’s subordination and marginalization in politics, the second shift and the wage gap, victim blaming, the murder of transgender women, bashing gay men, repelling girls from math and science before they even get to high school, increasingly limited access to reproductive health care, racial profiling, and more. Research indicates that street harassment limits women’s presence in public space – where the work of politics and social change is most likely to take place – and that women think about harassment, fear it, and plan for it, even in its absence (Gardner 1995). Street harassment is more than a nuisance, more than a threat, more even that the violence that sometimes accompanies it….

Street harassment conveys the message that harassers are entitled to own public space and in a sense to control and violate the people in that space. The message to targets of street harassment is that they should hide, be afraid, pay attention to what potential street harassers want them to do, and wear and say and be. Street harassment robs people of safety, agency, power, and opportunity. Increasingly, activists are writing about and rallying together to address street harassment. It is time that more researchers joined them.”

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment

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