CALL FOR PARTICIPATION – ONLINE DISCUSSION – TRANSFORMING SOCIAL NORMS TO PREVENT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN & GIRLS
Wikigender would like to hear your views, lessons learned and best practices or policies in ending violence against women.
Participate in this online discussion and be heard at a side event on the topic of social norms – e.g. traditions and practices that shape or restrict the decisions, choices and behaviours of groups, communities and individuals – and the prevention of violence against women (VAW) and girls, taking place on 4 March 2013 during the fifty-seventh session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in New York!.
The event will be co-organised by the OECD Development Centre and the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland.
Wikigender, Breakthrough, End Violence Against Women (EVAW UK), the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, Partners for Prevention (P4P) (P4P) andWomankind Worldwide invite you to participate in this online discussion on“Transforming social norms to prevent violence against women and girls”. The inputs from the Wikigender community will be presented via a summary report at the event.
To participate, scroll down to the bottom of the page and enter your comment from Monday 04/02 onwards.
Background
The 2013 theme for the fifty-seventh session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) is on the Elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls. In this context, Wikigender is hosting an online discussion on the topic, with a particular focus on social norms.
The OECD Development Centre’s 2012 Social Institutions and Gender Index (SIGI) found that while there has been progress in some areas, discriminatory social norms and practices which undermine gender equality and contribute to violence against women remain persistent and pervasive. For example, despite the introduction of laws, attitudes that normalise violence against women persist: on average, for the countries scored in the SIGI, around 1 in 2 women believe domestic violence is justified in certain circumstances. Female genital mutilation (FGM) is another discriminatory practice that remains prevalent in many countries in Africa (for example Somalia has the highest prevalence at 98%), despite improvements in some countries like Kenya, Benin, Togo,Ghana and Malawi. Missing women, stemming from female foeticide and sex-selective abortions, remains a serious problem in some countries, particularly in South Asia andEast Asia and the Pacific.
Violence against women bears significant and enduring consequences for women and their communities. Violence against women is closely linked to poor health outcomes for women and girls, including maternal mortality and vulnerability to HIV; and it negatively impacts on women’s access to economic resources and opportunities both in and outside the household. This new online discussion will therefore be a unique opportunity to capture your views on how we can transform social norms to prevent violence against women. There are many initiatives and campaigns throughout the world raising awareness of VAW and seeking to create a different world. We particularly welcome contributions from implementers at program and project level, the sharing of reports or discussions on the topic, as well as contributions on VAW data.
Questions
- Key issues: What type of social norms and attitudes contribute to violence against women? What are the entry points for changing social norms and attitudes that support violence against women? What are the challenges for changing social norms that support violence against women?
- Examples, case-studies: In your area/region, what are examples of successful policies, initiatives, campaigns and programmes that tackle social norms related to violence against women and girls? Are there approaches that are more effective than others in changing attitudes? How can we harness the power of new technologies and the media? What role does men and boys’ involvement play?
- Action required: What actions should governments, donors, international organisations and civil society take to transform social norms to prevent violence against women and girls? What type of data should be collected to monitor changes in social norms?
See past Wikigender online discussions.
Key Resources
- Expert Group Meeting: Prevention of violence against women and girls (17-20 September 2012, Bangkok, Thailand).
- Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence (Istanbul Convention)
- The Campaign Say No – UNiTE to End Violence against Women
- White Ribbon Campaign (Australia)
- Take Back the Tech
- Amnesty International
- End Violence Against Women Coalition (UK)
- Womankind Worldwide (UK)
- Partners for Prevention – a UNDP, UNFPA, UN Women and UNV Asia-Pacific Regional Joint Programme for Gender-based Violence Prevention
- Breakthrough – for their campaign on VAW, visit the [1] Bell Bajao website
- The Sonke Gender Justice Network
- The GBV Prevention Network
- The VAW Prevention Network
- ICRW, VAW page
- Lori L. Heisk, What Works to Prevent Partner Violence? (Working Paper, December 2011)
- UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, The Dynamics of social change: Towards The abandonment of female genital mutilation/cutting in five African countries (Innocenti Insight, October 2010)
Wikigender articles (a selection)
Violence against women
- Violence against women
- Violence against women and the Millennium Development Goals
- Honour crimes
- Female Genital Mutilation
- Domestic violence
- Conjugal violence
- Missing women
- Early marriage
- Rape and Marital rape
- UN Action against Sexual Violence in Conflict
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Maria da Penha law
Case studies
- Gender violence in India
- Domestic violence against women in Brazil
- Domestic violence in India
- Conjugal violence in France
- Haiti: Fighting gender-based violence in the post-quake environment
- Ciudad Juárez: ‘Feminicidios’ and Sexual Violence
Tagged with: violence against women





I would like to participate.
In uganda, women suffer a lot in the hands of men today. This is simply because, women rely on men for every needs of their lives. it is even worse with a girl child. she is denied education and forced to marry at a early stage leaving her with no option rather to suffer in the marriage. we can have a break through all these by encauraging women to have self sustainable business or income generating activities.I think that is a fair approach. thanks
I WOULD LOVE TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS THING ABOUT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN HERE IN UGANDA ITS SO COMMON
My experience working in the interplay fields of Gender, SRHR, and Human Rights in Malawi is that VAW against women has been achieved greatly in terms of issue identification and policy formualation. The extent on the prevalence, as well as the impact of GBV/VAW has adequate stastics at National level, and such statistics have led to several interventions, which however, have not resulted into significant reduction of VAW/GAB cases at community, district, and subregional levels, hence the never changing vicious tale of VAW. Thus it is still a challenge for Malawi, and several other countries in the Sub-hara of Africa to translate national policies into action plans vis-a-vis community projects that can lead to attitude and behavioural change, as well as the perception of women by men. Many men enjoy the cultural practices and behaviours that opress women. In other circumstances, women have been in the forefront perpertuating the opression of their fellow women due to society pressure, and lack of knowledge. This is normal because it has been part of their society/socialisation process. Apart from awareness interventions, such challenges calls for empowrment projects that include rights based trainings, capacity building, information sharing, and knowledge based advocacy that includes both men and women. My organisation Church and Society of Livingstonia Synod, has been engaged in such interventions since 1999 using the Rights Based Approached which have proved a success in changing attitudes and mindset of women and men, and boys and girls. One of the key aspect is the enagging of new actors (Men, Boys and Community Leaders) in the fighting of VAW