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Episode 130: Domestic Violence Awareness Month Community Conversation on Systems Change
Manage episode 278081188 series 2472378
This year, in recognition of DVAM or Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the Engendered Collective hosted a series of community conversations to bring greater awareness to domestic abuse and gender-based violence. This first conversation deals with how we can create systems change and build a culture of accountability. Our guests included Elle Kamihira and Dr. Emma Katz.
Elle Kamihira is survivor, activist, and a multi-disciplinary director who has spent the last twenty years collaborating on a variety of award-winning film, museum, documentary, and theater projects. Current projects include Jennifer 42, an animated documentary that takes a close look at the role of coercive control in the true story of the murder of Jennifer Magnano, and The Most Wicked Problem, a docu-series about femicide.
Dr. Emma Katz, a researcher based in England focused on coercive control of children. Her most recent article When Coercive Control Continues to Harm Children: Post‐Separation Fathering, Stalking and Domestic Violence can be downloaded for free here . Her book Coercive Control in Children’s and Mothers’ Lives will be published by Oxford University Press in 2021. Follow Emma on Twitter at @DrEmmaKatz
During our conversation, Elle, Emma, and I touched upon the following resources:
- Lisa Fischel-Wolovick's article, Battered Mothers and Children in the Courts: A Lawyer's View
- The difference between primary (stopping violence before it starts), secondary (preventing violence from escalating), and tertiary (minimizing negative impact of violence and trauma) prevention of domestic abuse
- Evan Stark's work on "coercive control"
- A discussion paper from the government of NWS on criminalizing coercive control and Women's Safety NSW's Position Paper on criminalizing coercive control
- Jane Gilmore's work on violence and the representation of women in the media
- Nazir Afzal's work on prosecuting gender-based crimes in Britain
- Britain' efforts to categorize sexist and misogynistic acts as hate crimes
- How Scotland's laws on coercive control have stricter sentencing than England
- The work of the CEDAR Network addressing mother-child victims of abuse
- "Perspecticide" as a manifestation of coercive control
- Using the "Housing First" model to address housing insecurity for victims of abuse
---
Thanks for tuning in to the en(gender)ed podcast!
Be sure to check out our en(gender)ed site and follow our blog on Medium.
Join our feminist community of survivors, advocates and allies!
Consider donating because your support is what makes this work sustainable.
Please also connect with us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Don’t forget to subscribe to the show!
155 afleveringen
Manage episode 278081188 series 2472378
This year, in recognition of DVAM or Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the Engendered Collective hosted a series of community conversations to bring greater awareness to domestic abuse and gender-based violence. This first conversation deals with how we can create systems change and build a culture of accountability. Our guests included Elle Kamihira and Dr. Emma Katz.
Elle Kamihira is survivor, activist, and a multi-disciplinary director who has spent the last twenty years collaborating on a variety of award-winning film, museum, documentary, and theater projects. Current projects include Jennifer 42, an animated documentary that takes a close look at the role of coercive control in the true story of the murder of Jennifer Magnano, and The Most Wicked Problem, a docu-series about femicide.
Dr. Emma Katz, a researcher based in England focused on coercive control of children. Her most recent article When Coercive Control Continues to Harm Children: Post‐Separation Fathering, Stalking and Domestic Violence can be downloaded for free here . Her book Coercive Control in Children’s and Mothers’ Lives will be published by Oxford University Press in 2021. Follow Emma on Twitter at @DrEmmaKatz
During our conversation, Elle, Emma, and I touched upon the following resources:
- Lisa Fischel-Wolovick's article, Battered Mothers and Children in the Courts: A Lawyer's View
- The difference between primary (stopping violence before it starts), secondary (preventing violence from escalating), and tertiary (minimizing negative impact of violence and trauma) prevention of domestic abuse
- Evan Stark's work on "coercive control"
- A discussion paper from the government of NWS on criminalizing coercive control and Women's Safety NSW's Position Paper on criminalizing coercive control
- Jane Gilmore's work on violence and the representation of women in the media
- Nazir Afzal's work on prosecuting gender-based crimes in Britain
- Britain' efforts to categorize sexist and misogynistic acts as hate crimes
- How Scotland's laws on coercive control have stricter sentencing than England
- The work of the CEDAR Network addressing mother-child victims of abuse
- "Perspecticide" as a manifestation of coercive control
- Using the "Housing First" model to address housing insecurity for victims of abuse
---
Thanks for tuning in to the en(gender)ed podcast!
Be sure to check out our en(gender)ed site and follow our blog on Medium.
Join our feminist community of survivors, advocates and allies!
Consider donating because your support is what makes this work sustainable.
Please also connect with us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Don’t forget to subscribe to the show!
155 afleveringen
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