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“I am still a child and I am being sexualized”

January 25, 2018 By Contributor

First of all, I am thirteen. I was walking my dog around the block and a car filled with young men, possibly 16-22 whistled and shouted, “Damnnn” as I bent over fix my dog’s harness. I felt extremely violated and I still do. People comment on how I am so lucky to have larger hips, butt and thighs. But I am still a child and I am being sexualized. This needs to stop.

– Anonymous

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: 13 years old, child

I said, “Please respect yourself.”

January 24, 2018 By Contributor

I was heading home from school while wearing my Universal Camouflage Pattern ACU uniform because I am in the JROTC program. On my way, I faced a group of guys walking my way about 150 ft away. They start yelling, “Yo are you in the air force?”

Then they nudged each other and laughed, then repeated it all over again. From that, I learned that they just wanted to mess around, so I ignored them.

However, as I passed by, one of them said, “Look at them big juicy tits,” followed by “That ass should hop on my dick.”

And let me remind you, I was wearing an army uniform meaning that it is no way “sexual” or even appealing. Anyways, I continued walking because the words hadn’t registered in my mind yet. But once they did, I turned around and to my shock they’re standing right in their place looking back at me. So, I said, “Please respect yourself.”

They acted like they couldn’t hear and laughed. So, I turned around and continued on my way home and I balled my eyes out. I regretted my decision to speak back at them. I wished that I had ignored them.

Once I was home, I felt like I wanted to cry again, but I was just too tired. Instead of studying, I just sat on my bed thinking of the scene over and over again. Thinking of what I should have done and what should I do now. It’s the worst feeling on the planet. I told some adults, but all I received was “sorry”s and “shrug it off”s.

Actual help?

Optional: What’s one way you think we can make public places safer for everyone?

Teach boys not to sexualize women

– Anonymous

Location: Right outside school

Need support? Call the toll-free National Street Harassment hotline: 855-897-5910

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for idea
s.

 

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Welcome Blog Correspondents – Cohort #1 of 2018!

January 15, 2018 By HKearl

Please join me in welcoming our newest Blog Correspondents! They represent four countries, four continents and will write monthly articles about street harassment issues in their communities and/or activism to address it.

Megan, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Megan calls Melbourne, Australia, home. She has a Bachelor’s of Social Work from Latrobe University and a Master’s in Criminology from the University of Melbourne. Megan is honoured to be a part of the first SSH cohort for 2018 and believes that the sharing of stories through such initiatives goes a long way in preventing street harassment from being part of the narrative of the “everyday” for women all over the world. She’s new to Twitter, so come say hello and share your story at @thecutlerydraw.

Yasmin Curzi, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil

Yasmin is a Research Assistant at the Center for Research on Law and Economics at FGV-Rio. She has a Master’s Degree in Social Sciences from PUC-Rio where she wrote her thesis on street harassment and feminists’ struggles for recognition. She has a B.A. in Social Sciences from FGV-Rio and is concluding a second B.A. in law. Her main academic interests are political sociology, feminist theories and global social movements.

Connie DiSanto, New Hampshire, USA

Connie is a visual communicator who has been working in the field for over 30 years. She is currently a marketing communications specialist for the Sexual Harassment & Rape Prevention Program (SHARPP) at the University of New Hampshire where she is responsible for designing and implementing multi-media campaigns and marketing materials for SHARPP events, education, messaging and outreach. She is also the “face” behind SHARPP’s social media presence and the content creator for the program’s website. Connie also assists with direct service to those impacted by sexual violence on the UNH campus. Being able to combine her creative background with her desire in advocating for an end to sexual violence is a unique opportunity that she feels lucky to be a part of. You can reach her by email here.

Patrick Hogan, Chicago, IL, USA

Patrick Hogan is an undergraduate student majoring in anthropology and minoring in Islamic World Studies at Loyola University Chicago, preparing to continue onto law and graduate school. He is particularly interested in legal anthropology and the ways victims are viewed by legal systems. He has held positions in social justice and charity programs, including Public Relations for Loyola Hunger Week and board positions with the University’s chapter of the American Red Cross. He hopes to find research-based solutions to social issues. In his free time, he enjoys mountain biking and skiing.

Dovie Jenkins, Detroit, MI, USA

Dovie is a Graduate Teaching Assistant at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. She earned her B.A. in Anthropology at Wayne State, graduating summa cum laude. She is currently pursuing an M.A. in Anthropology and Philosophy. She hopes to complete a Ph.D. in Philosophy and one day secure a tenure-track position. Dovie’s academic interests include the evolution of moral reasoning, moral psychology, ethics, and epistemology. She is also interested in public philosophy, specifically issues relating to gender equality. She is also a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Dovie’s non-academic interests include endurance running, hiking, wilderness camping, kayaking, and various board-related sports.

Elizabeth Kuster, Brooklyn, NY, USA

Elizabeth is an Iowa-born and -raised writer and editor who has a B.A. in journalism from the University of Iowa, where she was a member of the undergrad Writer’s Workshop for fiction. Back in the day, she pitched and wrote the very first mainstream-media article about street harassment (for Glamour). Throughout her career, she has focused on developing content that empowers women and helps them live more vibrant, badass lives. She has held full-time editorial positions at publications such as Glamour, Seventeen and The Huffington Post and is author of the self-help/humor book Exorcising Your Ex. In her spare time, Elizabeth enjoys trolling the #FakePresident on Twitter. You can follow Elizabeth on Twitter at @bethmonster, but be advised that she’s been dropping a lot of F-bombs lately.

Isha Raj-Silverman, San Diego, CA, USA

Isha Raj-Silverman is a high school senior at La Jolla High School in San Diego, California. She is a local activist on various women’s issues, but particularly sexual harassment and assault. She has organized her high school’s sexual assault awareness campaigns as president and founder of La Jolla Girl Up, and helped to organize various feminist activism and advocacy events in her community such as the International Day of the Girl Child and a youth art silent auction and concert benefiting the Center for Community Solutions, her local rape crisis center. Isha is also an active member in her high school theatre community, and spends what time she has while not in school, acting, or advocating discussing politics and reading terrible young adult literature, and then loudly discussing how very feminist or misogynistic said literature was and how it may affect or be affected by the views young women have of themselves.

Adetayo Talabi, Lagos, Nigeria

Adetayo resides in Lagos. He is a Judicial Assistant/Law Clerk to Justices of the Lagos Division of the Court of Appeals. He has a Diploma and Bachelor of Laws Degree from the University of Benin, Nigeria. Although his educational and professional backgrounds are in law, Adetayo volunteers with several Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) including Just Justice, Irede Foundation, The Soup Kitchen with focus on legal aid, domestic/gender-based violence, gender equality and human rights. You can reach him by mail here or follow him on twitter at @TalabiJ_.

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Filed Under: correspondents, street harassment Tagged With: correspondents

Looking Ahead to SSH Programs in 2018

January 2, 2018 By HKearl

Municipal Office of Women of Villa Nueva Guatemala took part in Anti-SH Week 2017. Will you take part in our week in 2018?

2017 was a big year, and 2018 looks like it will be even bigger!

As we look toward 2018, we already have a few projects on the horizon:

1. Blog Correspondents Program: We are looking for applicants for our first cohort of Blog Correspondents! Apply by Jan. 7!

2. National Survey: Thanks to our generous donors, PinPoint Foundation and Raliance, we are moving forward with the survey firm GfK to conduct a nationally representative survey on sexual abuse across all the spaces it occurs. The survey draft is under review by our advisory committee right now and we hope to see the 2000-person survey conducted in mid-January. Afterward, pro bono data analyst will be conducted by Dr. Anita Raj, Director of UC San Diego’s Center on Gender Equity and Health. We hope to release the timely report in March 2018!

3. International Anti-Street Harassment Week: Our 8th annual week of awareness will take place from April 8 to 14, 2018! If your group or organization would like to co-sponsor, please be in touch with StopStreetHarassment@yahoo.com. Stay tuned for more information, including a toolkit for community action that is tied to the national survey.

4. National Hotline: We will continue to partner with RAINN to offer the only national hotline dedicated to ending street harassment. It costs about $400 per month to run both the phone and online hotline. Your tax-deductible donation can help keep the hotline running!

May 2018 will mark our 10-year anniversary, so that will also make it a big year for us.

Thank you for being part of our community, and we look forward to working with you more in 2018!

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Filed Under: national study, SSH programs, street harassment Tagged With: anti-street harassment week, correspondents, hotline, programs, research

Highlights of Street Harassment News, Efforts & Activism in 2017

December 29, 2017 By HKearl

Students in Malaysia protest street harassment in Dec. 2017. Image via Open Democracy

Here is our annual round-up of some of the government actions, glorious activism, studies, and big news stories of 2017. And of course, there were hundreds of actions that took place in 40 countries over International Anti-Street Harassment Week, too.

Government Action:

The first mandatory legal mediation in the first ever street sexual harassment case in the country took place in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Argentina’s Lower House approved a bill that will criminalize street harassment nationally and set-up a free hotline.

A new mobile app will launch soon in Belgium to help survivors and witnesses of sexual harassment.

The city of London in Ontario (Canada) is planning efforts to prevent street harassment.

In November, French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled measures aimed at educating the public and schoolchildren about sexism and violence against women, a national law on street harassment and more.

In India, the Alwar police formed an all-women team to crack down on people harassing women and girls on city streets.

New posters by the Dublin City Council (Ireland) say, “A sexist remark is not a compliment.”

A new cartoon character tells people to report street harassment in Japan.

There was a death penalty ruling in a forced public stripping case in Kenya.

The gang rape of a woman on a bus in Morocco led to protests and promises of action by the Prime Minister.

There’s a new sexual harassment hotline for transit riders in Kathmandu (Nepal).

A new fine and jail time will be enforced on street harassment in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

In December, Rotterdam (Netherlands) became the first city in Europe to launch a mobile app that allows victims of sexual harassment to report the incidents instantly and anonymously. People can give their locations, a description of the harassment and any additional information they wish to share. The information will allow the city council to see where there are hotspots of harassment.

In November, two harasser police officers were the first ones tried under Quezon City’s anti-harassment ordinance (Philippines).

An anti-street harassment ordinance is under consideration in Manilla, Philippines, as of December.

An anti-harassment ordinance was proposed in October in Baguio City, Philippines.

The penalty for taking non-consensual upskirt photos increased in Thailand.

There’s a new dress code being enforced in Uganda, including against mini-skirts.

A Labour MP in the UK suggested women-only train carriages – but the idea is insulting.

The category of “gender hate crime” became recognized in Bristol (UK) in October.

Following the lead of the cities like Bristol and Nottingham, as of December, the whole of the UK may soon begin to classify sexual abuse (including street harassment) as a hate crime.

Upskirt photos and videos may become a crime in UK.

TFL and Met Police in the UK launched a ‘Report It to Stop It’ campaign to raise awareness about how to report sexual harassment on the London transit systems.

Legislation introduced in New York City would require police officers to undergo sensitivity training on dealing with sexual assault and street harassment.

The Los Angeles Metro launched a hotline staffed by professional counselors to help people facing sexual harassment on the transit system.

 

Grassroots & Organizational Activism:

Women in Argentina held a topless protest over men’s censorship of their bodies in public spaces.

Calls for bystanders to stop sexual assault in festival crowds in Australia.

A female-only ridesharing service launched in Queensland, Australia… but addressing root causes of street harassment is a must, too.

Women in Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, Dominica, Guyana, Jamaica, and The Bahamas marched to protest sexual violence. #LifeinLeggings

A pop up exhibit at MacEwan University (Canada) showed men what it feels like to be catcalled.

Pressure is mounting for music venues in Canada to address sexual harassment.

Street artists in Colombia challenge sexism, street harassment with spray paint.

The new film “The People’s Girls” about street harassment in Egypt is now available.

The Egyptian anti-harassment initiative HarassMap is the subject of a new 17-minute documentary, The Campaign, shedding light on the advocacy group’s effort to mount a massive ad campaign.

Men in Egypt are working with other men to discuss their role and actions as bystanders, perpetrators and victims of violence, including street harassment.

Outraged women in an eastern Parisian district of France staged demonstrations and launched an online petition in May over a “male den” where women are subject to harassment and sexist remarks.

Women across France rallied against sexual violence under the #MeToo banner in October while a national law against street harassment inched closer to passage.

An anti-harassment hotline in France quickly had to shut down due to trolls.

TBILISI-Safari Union launched an anti-harassment campaign in Georgia, including legislation and education suggestions.

Activists in Guyana discussed how to address street harassment in their country. | Members of the Witness Project in Guyana put up posters that say “It’s Not a Compliment. It’s Street Harassment.”

School girls in India went on a hunger strike to protest the men who harassed them on their way to and from school and the lack of action by local officials to stop them.

Safecity (India) launched a mobile app for reporting incidents of sexual harassment.

In India, a female brigade helps women catch their harassers.

On Jan. 21, women across India marched to protest sexual harassment and misogyny using the hashtag #IWillGoOut.

Air India launched a women-only section of their airplane due to incidents of sexual harassment.

To commemorate the brutal gang rape and murder of Jyoti Singh in Delhi, India, Blank Noise organized action in parks for women to claim public spaces, safely.

From offline activism by girls in PLAN International to online mapping by Safecity, young women are leading the efforts to stop street harassment in India.

Rickshaw drivers in Delhi, India, are taking gender classes in the hopes of curbing harassment.

Women in Jakarta, Indonesia, are taking action against street harassment. | Activists in Indonesia began bringing attention to the widespread problem of street harassment.

Tambourine Army is a new organization fighting gender-based violence in Jamaica.

There was a new anti-harassment campaign in Lebanon, #mesh_basita.

Students in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, held street action against street harassment at Petaling Jaya city council square. They held signs with slogans like, “Cats are cute, catcalls are not”; “Don’t keep calm and stop sexual harassment”; “My name is not baby.”

Mexico City has a “sexist” seat on the subway to raise awareness about sexual harassment.

A college student in the Netherlands took selfies with many of her street harassers across one month.

Stop Straatintimidatie launched a new anti-harassment campaign in the Netherlands.

Teenage girls in Wellington, New Zealand, protested street harassment and other forms of sexual violence outside Parliament.

The punk band Sløtface in Norway is tackles street harassment and rape culture in their video Bright Lights.

In Punjab, Pakistan, the Women Safety Smart Phone App launched.

Three women’s groups urged Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela Monday to sign a bill meant to prohibit and punish sexual harassment, stalking, sexism and racism in all areas.

Beauty pageant contestants in Peru gave PSAs about sexual violence, including street harassment.

A construction site in Peru posted a sign saying they are against street harassment.

Patricia in Spain launched a Change.org petition calling for studying and stopping street harassment in Madrid.

Bars and clubs in Switzerland are doing more to address sexual abuse.

Women in Trinidad asked men to leave them alone during Carnival.

From Uganda to Tajikistan, women are fighting to enjoy the freedom of bicycling.

A woman in the UK made a map of street harassment hotspots.

In the UK, a bar posted a sign to deter male customers from harassing the female bartender.

The “Unmute” badge fosters bystander action on public transit in the UK.

Thousands of people took to the streets of Manchester (UK) during the annual Reclaim the Night march.

Women in Bristol (UK) are mapping street harassment.

“Cheer Up Luv” is a new UK-based photo series project. “Road to Equality” is a seven-minute documentary about street harassment in the UK.

Womanability released a new video on women’s safety in public in Uruguay.

Through the The Talk Project, teens in California (USA) educate each other about sexual harassment and assault.

Prior to the Lightning in a Bottle music festival in Los Angeles (USA), there was a class offered for fans and staff about sexual harassment at festivals, “Creating Safer-Braver Spaces: Consent Culture & Social Care”.

A Sacramento (USA) artist did an audio art project on street harassment called “This is What It Feels Like.”

Student Elena Czarnik Deeter created a sound art piece based on catcalling called “Hear Us.”

The Muslim self-empowerment group WISE + two Muslim girls created a self-defense toolkit.

Women of color in Washington, D.C. (USA) organized against street harassment.

Latina and African American women in the USA created a choreo-film on street harassment.

With her project Catcalls of NYC, NYU student Sophie Sandberg has been using bold colors to chalk stories of street harassment. She said she hopes that writing down the harassment people endure will help them reclaim their own voice. “I want people who feel silenced, objectified or victimized, to understand that they can be agents of change,” she said. “One voice can contribute to a collective movement. With that, we have power and we cannot be silenced.”

Netflix launched an anti-street harassment campaign called #MyNameIsnt to go along with Spike Lee’s new TV show “She’s Gotta Have It.”

Studies and Reports:

The Global Mobility Report (by World Bank-led partner SuM4All) shows that “harassment and physical abuse are preventing women around the world from being able to use public transportation safely.”

A new study conducted in the MENA region sheds light on why men street harass.

A study published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health found strong links between women’s experience of sexual violence – including street harassment — and poor mental health.

A study found that 23% of female commuters in Dhaka, Bangladesh, faces sexual harassment on the buses.

Reports of sexual harassment are up on Brussels’ (Belgium) public transport.

A study in the British Journal of Social Psychology shows street harassment negative impacts how women think about themselves.

In Egypt, the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics surveyed young people ages 15 to 29 in “informal urban areas of Greater Cairo” and 48% viewed street harassment as a problem.

France’s ONDRP found that 267,000 people (85% women) faced sexual harassment on public transport between 2014-2015.

43% of women in Germany have faced some form of sexual abuse, with most occurring in public spaces.

A new study of boys in Mumbai (India) shows they think “good girls” don’t experience street harassment.

In an informal survey conducted in Myanmar, more than 80% of women had faced street harassment.

Karachi’s (Pakistan) Urban Resource Center found most female commuters experience some form of sexual harassment while using public transport.

Eighty-four percent of women experience sexual harassment in Rotterdam, Netherlands, including street harassment.

A survey conducted by United Nations Population Fund found that 90% of women and girls in Sri Lanka have faced sexual harassment on public transport.

In the UK, a poll showed that younger women face higher rates of harassment and are more likely to see wolf-whistling as unacceptable compared with older women.

Almost 80% of women and 26% of men ages 18 to 24 have been sexually harassed during “a night out” in the UK.

In the UK, 34% of teenage girls worry about being followed by a stranger and many girls cited experiences of street harassment.

Reports of street harassment are on the rise in Cambridge, UK.

An undergraduate poll shows that 48.2 percent of female-identifying students report facing catcalls at least once a month while at Brown University (USA).

A new survey shows 1 in 3 men don’t think catcalling is harassment (USA)

A high percentage of Missoula (MT, USA) patrons experience sexual harassment.

A new report from Harvard Graduate School of Education found that 87% of women in the U.S. have faced sexual harassment. Among 18 to 25 year olds, most said they had faced sexual harassment, including 41% saying a stranger had touched them without permission.

A new study says sexually objectifying a woman, including through catcalling, can lead to aggression towards women.

 

Story-Telling and Op-Eds:

How #MeToo turned into a cultural moment.

The Silence Breakers of 2017 who have spoken publicly against sexual harassment and sexism are the “TIME person of the year.”

A CNN article in November traced statistics on sexual harassment globally. The U.S. statistic was from SSH’s 2014 study!

BBC’s global 100 Women campaign included harassment on public transit.

Women in Afghanistan weigh the pro’s and con’s of speaking out against street harassment and other forms of sexual abuse they face daily.

The VICE Arabia offices asked their women staff about their experiences of street harassment.

A woman in Adelaide, Australia, wrote about being scared to walk the streets of her own town after dark.

Women in Brazil shared their stories of harassment and abuse by taxi and rides-sharing drivers.

Young women in Egypt face harassment in public spaces and restrictions at home.

A woman in Hong Kong spoke out against people who victim-blame women facing street harassment.

Women in India shared their street harassment stories using the hashtag #NotMyShame.

The powerful Irish spoken word piece “Heartbreak” addressed street harassment.

A teenager’s account of harassment went viral in Italy.

A growing number of Jamaican women stood up to abusers, using social media as a platform of empowerment through the creation of hashtags such as #metoo, #weknowwhatyoudid, #saytheirnames and #dearJamaicanmen.

A New Zealand woman wrote an open letter to all cat-callers.

In Pakistan, sisters Zara and Zoya Khan stood up to street harassers, garnering national attention.

A woman in South Africa wrote about wishing she was a man so she didn’t face harassment.

Best-selling author and comedian Jen Kirkman tackled street harassment in her stand-up special Just Keep Livin’?.

In the U.S., Feminista Jones began responding to strange men who “complimented” her by agreeing… and then the men get mad. She said in an interview: “For a man to be comfortable sending an unsolicited comment about your body via text or Tinder or Bumble or whatever, or to feel comfortable yelling some shit at you on the sidewalk, he has to feel — at least in some small way — like you exist for him. If you take those compliments in stride instead of blushing and cooing and being the Good Modest Woman he hopes your mother raised you to be, you’re proving you don’t exist for him at all. Your “great body” belongs to you, and of course that’s gonna piss this exact type of dude off.”

What it’s like to be street harassed while seven months pregnant.

“Where do Harvey Weinsteins come from?”

“Russell Simmons, R. Kelly and Why Black Women Can’t Say #MeToo.”

“My daughter got her first catcall [at age 11, from an adult man], and I didn’t know what to tell her.”

“On being a woman alone in the woods.”

“Why it’s never okay for men to ask women to smile.”

“I recorded every time I was catcalled this summer: Here’s what I learned.”

When fellow women are your first line of defense on Muni.”

“My body doesn’t belong to you.”

“The thrill and fear of ‘Hey, Beautiful’”

“I don’t accommodate uncontrolled men”

“9 types of street harassment you’ve probably experiences if you’re a woman”

“After fighting off mid-run attack, she’s using her voice to help others”

“12 moms share gross stories of getting catcalled while with their kids”

What it’s like to cycle as a woman in various parts of the world.

The exhibition El Tendedero/The Clothesline Project, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, tackled sexual harassment/abuse.

 

Other News:

Hundreds of men sexually assaulted women in Bangaluru, India, on New Year’s Eve. Among those speaking out afterward were those advocating for education and socialization of children to be respectful.

In Dallas, Texas, LeDajrick Cox, who just graduated from high school, and two male friends and a female friend were out celebrating. In a 7-11 parking lot, three men in another car started street harassing their female friend, and Cox intervened to defend her. Eventually, Cox and his friends left but the three men followed them and shot into the car. Cox and the two other young men were all injured and Cox died from his injuries. A young life is needlessly over. I applaud him for doing the right thing and am so saddened he is dead.

In Portland, Oregon, a white supremacist began harassing two young women on a train, using anti-Muslim slurs. One woman was wearing hijab. When three men intervened to help the young women, the man attacked, killing two of them and injuring one. Again this is just unbelievably horrific and sad. There have been many news stories about the tragedy and praise given to the three men. I glad they intervened but feel so saddened that for two of them, it cost them their lives. That never should have happened.

In College Park, Maryland, a white supremacist seemingly randomly stabbed and killed a recent African American college graduate near the University of Maryland campus.

In Manchester, UK, a suicide bomber attacked an Ariana Grande concert that was mainly attended by teenage and tween-age girls. More than 20 people died and even more were injured.

A teenage boy defended his teenage female friends against a 47-year-old street harasser, only for the man to pull a gun on them. Fortunately, the teens were safe, and the man was arrested.

A man in his 20s or 30s repeatedly grabbed and harassed teenage girls near their school in Flagstaff, AZ.

A Detroit woman was maced and beaten after rejecting the advances of street harassers.

A runner in Salt Lake City stabbed a man with the knife she carries running after he groped her.

A man in China stabbed a woman on the bus after she protested his harassment.

42 gay men in Nigeria were arrested simply for organizing a HIV awareness event in a public venue. Sign a petition for their release.

Female students at the University of Delhi (India) were locked in the dorm due to fears of sexual harassment at the Holi festival.

Why street harassers speak the same language across the USA.

A guitarist in the USA stopped his performance after witnessing sexual harassment in the audience.

Pakistani singer Atif Aslam called out and interrupted an incident of sexual harassment happening at his concert in Karachi

A man in Florida called out a street harasser – that man then punched him and sent him to the hospital. The harasser/assailant was arrested.

Most U.S. cities were designed around men and it’s time for that to change.

“Paying to stay safe: why women don’t walk as much as men.”

Saturday Night Live’s “Welcome to Hell” skit focused on street harassment and other forms of sexual abuse.

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