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Hollaback! Beta Testing: Be the First!

March 2, 2010 By HKearl

Cross-posted from Hollaback NYC

Be one of the first to hollaback using our new Iphone app! With the push of a button, you can hollaback at your street harassers and Hollaback! will map it using your phone’s GPS. An automatic email will be sent to your account so you can tell us your story when you are safely back in the comfort of your home.

We are currently in the process of beta testing this new technology and we need your help! To be part of the testing, go to the Iphone store and purchase “UDID” (it’s free). Then use the app to email your UDID number to hollabacknyc@gmail.com. (Rumor has it you can also get the UDID off of iTunes). We’ll make sure you get the new app as soon as our developers complete it.

Your feedback can pave the way for the newest revolution against street harassment. Hollaback!

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Filed Under: Resources Tagged With: catcalling, hollaback, hollaback nyc, iphone app, street harassment

I’ve never felt so clueless about handling harassment

March 2, 2010 By Contributor

This is a follow up to “Have a nice day…you crazy bitch!”

I was walking my usual path to the bus stop this morning and saw the car that the men who harassed me last month used. I looked through my cell phone photos to compare it to the actual car, and sure enough, they’re one in the same. The things that aren’t clear enough in the original photo were more clear to me in person, such as a college decal on the top of the rear window, and an apartment complex parking tag in the rear window’s lower right corner. I took closer photos so I could have a clearer shot of the license plate and decals.

A rush of anger ran through me. I want to do something about it. I thought about printing up the original story and having it on me so if I were to see that car yet again, I could put it on their windshield so they know that their rude behavior is now public. I thought about getting someone involved, but who? Who would I talk to about this? Would I talk to Key Elementary and get them involved, since these guys park near them (I assume these guys work nearby, maybe in the Arlington County Building), or would they say it’s not their problem since it’s not technically on their property?

I’ve never felt so clueless about how to handle harassment before! And I’m glad it was only the car I’d seen today, and not the actual harassers. I don’t know how I’d feel if I ever ran into those losers again.

– anonymous

Location: Arlington, VA

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem. Include your location and it will be added to the Street Harassment Map.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: arlington va, sexual harassment, Stories, street harassment

Street Harassment Activism in History

March 1, 2010 By HKearl

Because the internet is helping fuel discussions about and activism against street harassment, it can be easy for those of us in a young generation to think this is a new issue no one has addressed before. But women have been speaking out against street harassment for a few decades. For women’s history month, I want to point out a few of them on the scholarly side and acknowledge their work.

  • In 1981, Micaela di Leonardo wrote an article called “Political Economy of Street Harassment.” It’s the earliest place where I’ve seen the term street harassment used in the context of men harassing women because of their gender.
  • In 1984, Cheryl Benard and Edith Schlaffer conducted the first – and really the only – study on why men harass women. They published their findings in  an article called “The Man in the Street: Why He Harasses,” found in the book Feminist Frameworks.
  • Cynthia Grant Bowman wrote an extensive legal piece on street harassment called  “Street Harassment and the Informal Ghettoization of Women,“ for Harvard Law Review in 1993.
  • Carol Brooks Gardner led the first full-scale study on what she terms public harassment by studying 500 people in Indianapolis. Her findings are published in Passing By: Gender and Public Harassment (1995).
  • In 2002, Deirdre Davis wrote about street harassment and African American women in the article “The Harm that Has No Name: Street Harassment, Embodiment, and African American Women” published in Gender Struggles: Practical Approaches to Contemporary Feminism.

Each woman paved the way for later research on the topics. I have a full list of articles and books I’ve come across that deal with street harassment on my website if you’re interested in learning more.

Thank you to each of these woman (and to everyone I didn’t list but who have worked on this issue) for helping us get this far in addressing the widespread problem of street harassment.

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Filed Under: Resources, street harassment Tagged With: research, sexual harassment, street harassment, women's history month

Weekly Round Up Feb. 28, 2010

February 28, 2010 By HKearl

Stories:

I accept street harassment submissions from anywhere in the world. Share your story!

  • On this blog, a young woman in Los Angeles is harassed on her way home from school and a car full of men harass a young woman in Edmonton, Canada, as she waits for a bus.
  • On HollaBack DC! a woman is harassed on her way home from the gym and another woman and her friends were harassed outside a club.

In the News:

  • A truck driver in Frederick, MD, harasses a girl walking to school by throwing rose petals and candy at her.

Announcements:

  • Hollaback DC! is presenting a mural project at Chipsa on March 11
  • Watch the Vagina Monologues on March 19 and 20 if you’re in Washington, DC and help fundraise to bring RightRides to DC
  • Take a survey for Dr. Kimberly Fairchild’s research

Resource of the Week:

  • Know your Power Campaign from the University of New Hampshire — it focuses on the power bystanders have to make a difference when harassment and assault is occurring.
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Filed Under: News stories, Resources, Stories Tagged With: hollaback, know your power, rightrides, sexual harassment, street harassment, vagina monologues

Know Your Power Campaign

February 26, 2010 By HKearl

Photo from U of NH

I  love this new media campaign out of the University of New Hampshire. It encourages everyone to be good bystanders and know your power, step in, and speak up because we can all make a difference in preventing or stopping violence and showing others that it is socially unacceptable behavior.

They’ve got tons of great resources on how to intervene as a bystander – and the effectiveness of this approach – posters you can order and lots of related information. For example, here’s a checklist they put together:

Questions to Ask Before I Take Action

  • Am I aware there is a problem or risky situation?
  • Do I recognize someone needs help?
  • Do I see others and myself as part of the solutions?

Questions to Ask During the Situation

  • How can I keep myself safe?
  • What are my available options?
  • Are there others I may call upon for help?
  • What are the benefits/costs for taking action?

Decision to Take Action

  • When to act?

I know bystander intervention can be scary but it is really important. Most people don’t agree with violent behavior but if we are silent and let it happen, it will continue to happen.

Here’s more information on what we, especially men, can do.

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Filed Under: Resources Tagged With: bystander, bystander intervention, know your power, social media campaign, street harassment, university of new hampshire

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