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Stop The Bus! I Want To Get On: Lessons From Campaigns to End Violence Against Women in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and GhanaAuthorKathleen Dey
Judith Chiyangwa
Netsy Fekade Odoi
Rachel Carter
Kanwal Ahluwalia
Publication DateOctober 1, 2008
SummaryThis 37-page report offers lessons learned from the "Stop the Bus" campaigns which were run in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Ghana to raise awareness about and contribute to a reduction in violence against women. The report includes lessons and guidelines for non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and community-based organisations (CBOs) to encourage community awareness and understanding of gender-based violence, as well as to help those organisations build campaign strategies, and monitor their impact effectively. The report highlights the fact that community involvement and ownership of the campaign initiatives is essential to their long-term success. According to the report, while each campaign is unique, certain common factors in planning and managing a campaign emerge. For example, the campaign should be passionate and be designed to achieve change at several levels within the field of gender violence: at the individual, family, and community level, as well as in the policies and laws that govern societies. In addition, although campaigns can be multi-faceted involving different communication approaches, the campaign should stick to three or four key messages that should be included and promoted in all campaign materials, media interviews, and advocacy work. The four points should follow on from one another and make sense as a whole. The report provides case studies from three WOMANKIND partners: the Rape Crisis Cape Town Trust in South Africa, the Gender and Human Rights Documentation Centre in Ghana, and the Musasa Project in Zimbabwe. All three organisations ran campaigns during the 16 Days of Activism to end Gender Based Violence in 2006 and 2007. Some of the lessons identified were:
According to the report, over the last 10 years, activism working towards the elimination of violence against women (VAW) has increased significantly in Ghana. The Gender Studies and Human Rights Documentation Centre (Gender Centre) decided to implement the 2007 "16 Days of Activism" campaign in rural communities. The report states that the women of the communities appreciated the Gender Centre’s intervention to educate them about their rights and committed themselves to fight violence in their communities. While the men were receptive and actively participated in the discussion, some expressed fear that the outside intervention would give too much power to women. The chiefs, opinion leaders, and the state agencies all welcomed the intervention. By collaborating with the media, the Gender Centre spread the issue nationwide, reinforcing public discussion on violence against women and around Ghana’s Domestic Violence Act. The campaign’s logo featured a Ghana police officer with his hand stretched out signalling for VAW to stop. The police officer was used as a symbol for the law. Under the logo the campaign slogan – "Stop Violence Against Women, Break the Silence" – was printed on campaign t-shirts and banners. Some of the lessons identified were:
The Musasa Project’s 2007 campaign theme for the 16 days of Activism Against Gender Violence was: Demanding Implementation, Challenging Obstacles: End violence against women. It was designed to help to dismantle and overcome challenges posed by social attitudes and policies that continue to condone and perpetuate gender-based violence. According to the report, positive outcomes of the project campaign included:
WOMANKIND hopes that the experiences and recommendations of Rape Crisis Cape Town Trust, the Gender Centre, and the Musasa Project provide insights for any organisation wishing to carry out campaigns against gender-based violence. ContactWOMANKIND Worldwide
Development House
London
EC2A 4LT
United Kingdom (UK)
Rape Crisis Cape Town
23 Trill Road
Cape Town
7925
South Africa
Musasa Project
Ednah Bhala
Harare
Zimbabwe
Tel: + 263 4 725884
Fax: + 263 4 794983
The Gender Studies and Human Rights Documentation Centre
Ghana
SourceWOMANKIND Worldwide website on October 20, 2009. Placed on the Soul Beat Africa site October 21 2009 Last Updated October 21 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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