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Community Activism - Sonke Gender Justice
Sonke Gender Justice Network, 2008The One Man Can Campaign encourages men to become actively involved in advocating gender equality, preventing gender-based violence and responding to HIV and AIDS.DocumentEngaging men for effective activism against sexual and gender based violence
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2016Men are becoming ever more visible as integral partners in tackling sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV), holding themselves, peers and powerholders accountable for maintaining harmful gender norms that perpetuate violence.DocumentMobilising against sexual harassment in public space in Egypt: From blaming ‘open cans of tuna’ to ‘the harasser is a criminal’, EMERGE Story of Change 8
BRIDGE, 2015This story of change pulls out the key findings and recommendations from EMERGE case study 8, which focuses on the HarassMap and Imprint initiatives in Egypt. Male and female volunteers are working together to tackle sexual harassment in public spaces.Document'One hand can't clap by itself': Engagement of boys and men in KMG's intervention to eliminate FGM-C in Kembatta zone, Ethiopia, EMERGE Story of Change 3
BRIDGE, 2015This story of change pulls out the key findings and messages from EMERGE case study 3, which focuses on the work of Kembatti Mentti Gezzimma (KMG) in Kembatta Zone, Ethiopia. KMG works with men, boys, women and girls as part of its efforts to eliminate female genital mutilation-cutting.DocumentMobilising against sexual harassment in public space in Egypt: From blaming ‘open cans of tuna’ to ‘the harasser is a criminal’, EMERGE Case Study 8
2015In the aftermath of the Egyptian revolution in 2011, young men and women led highly innovative initiatives to counter increased levels of sexual harassment in Egypt’s public spaces.DocumentThe making of sexual violence: how does a boy grow up to commit rape? Evidence from five IMAGES countries
International Centre for Research on Women, 2014In a context where one in three women worldwide experience physical and/or sexual violence by a partner in their lifetimes, this study investigates the prevalence of sexual violence perpetration by men, as well as the risk and protective factors that reveal important insights for prevention and mitigation.DocumentReport on Beijing +20 (CSW 59)
2015In this well-written and informative piece, PEN International - the world’s leading association of writers - reports on the 59th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW59). In the report, the author, Tsung Su, acknowledges the work of specific non-governmental and civil society organisations in their efforts to inform, educate, and influence the negotiations of CSW59.DocumentMASVAW Movement Mapping Report: Movement Mapping and Critical Reflection with Activists of the Men’s Action to Stop Violence Against Women (MASVAW) Campaign, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, August 2014
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015This movement mapping report thus introduces a collaborative research project between the Centre for Health and Social Justice (CHSJ), India, their local activist partners in the Men’s Action to Stop Violence Against Women (MASVAW) campaign and the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) to explore the effectiveness of men’s collective action in addressing GBV.DocumentGender Relations, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence and the Effects of Conflict on Women and Men in North Kivu, Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. Results from the International Men and Gender Equality Survey (IMAGES): Final Report 2014
Promundo, 2014The International Men and Gender Equality Survey (IMAGES) was conducted in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in 2012 by Promundo and the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). It is a comprehensive study on men’s practices and attitudes as they relate to gender equality - with a focus on the impact of conflict on the construction of masculinities and gender relations.DocumentMasculinity, Intimate Partner Violence and Son Preference in India. A Study.
International Center for Research on Women, USA, 2014A sense of rigid masculinity, defined as controlling behaviour and a failure to espouse any values of gender equality, leads some Indian men to prefer sons over daughters and creates a tendency towards intimate partner violence.Pages
