Violence Against Women (VAW)

Take Back the Tech! to end violence against women.

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The Association for Progressive Communications Women’s Networking Support Programme (an international network that advance women’s rights through the strategic use of information and communications technologies) in partnership with Women’sNet are embarking on a project that builds the capacity of women’s rights activists and organizations to advocate and use ICTs to end violence against women.

The “Strengthening Women's Strategic Use of Information and Communications Technologies to Combat Violence Against Women and Girls” project aims to help women participants negotiate the fraught terrain of this new digital landscape, in which ICTs hold out the promise of greatly increased freedoms but are burdened with growing privacy and security concerns. The project is being implemented in 12 countries, across 3 regions and is supported by the MDG3 Fund. Women'sNet is the South African partner and is implementing the project in the country.

 

Goals of the project:

To mobilise key stakeholders to stop violence against women and girls by building feminist analysis into global, regional and national ICT policy

To build and strengthen the capacity of women and adolescent girls and women’s rights organisations to use, reclaim and shape ICT to stop violence against women and girls

To create platforms and opportunities for women and adolescent girls to critically engage with ICTs to combat violence, and as survivors of violence to contribute towards self and collective healing

 

Project Activities:

- Develop an Issue paper on violence against women and ICTs

- conduct a national strategy meeting

- Localise Take Back the Tech campaign

- Training events: Feminist Tech Exchanges

- ICT Policy and Advocacy

- Distribute small grants for 4 projects that use ICTs to address or prevent violence against women.

Contact: sally [at] womensnet [dot] org [dot] za

 

APC WNSP
MGD3 Fund
APC

Urgent Call to Action - Save the Saartjie Baartman Women's Centre From Closing

Published date: 
8 May 2012

URGENT CALL TO ACTION - SAVE THE SAARTJIE BAARTMAN WOMEN'S CENTRE FROM CLOSING

How can YOU help - WATCH the video of the Saartjie Baartman Women's Centre appeal.

TWEET @HelenZille - use the hash tag #saartjiebaartmancentre in your tweet - let's make this trend!

Why tweet to Helen Zille? Because she is leader of the Democratic Alliance party which has political control of the Western Cape and is the Western Cape Premier. She can DO something.

EMAIL Helen Zille - leader [at] da [dot] org [dot] za

Visit the Saartjie Baartman Women's Centre website HERE to read more

EMAIL the Director of the Centre Synnøv Skorge with letters of support or donations! synnov [at] womenscentre [dot] co [dot] za

Telephone +27 0 (21) 633 5278 Fax: +27 0 (21) 637 6487

The Saartjie Baartman Centre for Women and Children in Manenberg, Cape Town has a local and international reputation as one of the finest one-stop centres to provide free shelter, legal and counselling services, job-training programmes and other resources to abused women and their children. As one of the shelter residents says, “The Centre is for abused women. But it shouldn’t be called “for abused women”! This is the only place where there is never any abuse against women – it’s against abused women!” She was laughing as she explained this, despite the fact that she lost a pregnancy three days ago because her husband kicked her in the stomach. The Centre has for the past 13 years been a vital part of Cape Town’s response to the issue of violence against women, in their homes and elsewhere. In 2011 alone, over 4000 women and children drew upon their services for safety, housing, legal and medical support, job-training and overall support.

Gender Inequalities And HIV

Publisher: 
World Health Organisation (WHO)
Abstract: 
According to the latest (2008) WHO and UNAIDS global estimates, women comprise 50% of people living with HIV.

In sub-Saharan Africa, women constitute 60% of people living with HIV. In other regions, men having sex with men (MSM), injecting drug users (IDU), sex workers and their clients are among those most-at-risk for HIV, but the proportion of women living with HIV has been increasing in the last 10 years
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