Rebecca Campbell, Professor of Psychology and Program Evaluation, Michigan State University, has extensively studied the neurobiology of trauma and the criminal justice system response to sexual assault. She has found that emotional and physical manifestations of trauma can be misinterpreted, resulting in “secondary victimization” whereby treatment by law enforcement is experienced by victims as blaming and insensitive. Her goal is to educate first responders so that understand victims’ behavior (the neurobiology of trauma) and to change how the system responds to victims.
Hear her full presentation online.
Monday, June 29, 2015
Monday, June 22, 2015
Self-Defense Training: The Feminist Thing to Do
Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett argues that providing self-defense classes for women is the feminist thing to do. In the May 21, 2015 issue of The Guardian, Cosslett reflects on how connected self-defense training was to the late 20th century feminist movement and questions why in some contemporary feminist circles the mantra is anti-self-defense. She critiques the commonly heard phrase: “Don’t teach women how not to get raped, teach men not to rape.”
Go to the full article.
Go to the full article.
Monday, June 15, 2015
The Ability to Defend Oneself Affects All Aspects of Life
Avital Zeisler asks: In a culture of rape, how can we not insist that women learn self-defense? In her April 2015 Huffington Post blog, Zeisler shares her own experience of violence, the role self-defense training played in her healing from an attack by someone she loved, and her call to action for schools and governments.
Read the full blog post.
Please encourage every woman you know to register for one of our summer programs.
Read the full blog post.
Please encourage every woman you know to register for one of our summer programs.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Off to College: Defensive Literacy
"What if preparing for violence is just as responsible as acknowledging the possibility of a car accident or fire? When we use seatbelts, we are not inviting car accidents. We are simply being accountable for the possibility that car accidents happen. We have fire drills so we don't have to figure out what to do when the fire is happening. Drilling for violence actually makes one less of a target." Ellen Snortland and Gavin de Becker (2011)
How parents can support defensive literacy
1. Does your daughter's high school have self-defense training?
2. When you visit a campus in the spring, or even the fall when you leave your student, insist that the campus NOT depend solely on "rescue" strategies for safety.
3. Ask your student to promise they will find a designated sober party-person.
4. Does the school have adrenalin based, realistic scenario self-defense training?
For the full blog, go to Ellen Snortland and Gavin de Becker. 2011. "Rites of Spring" Huffington Post, November 17. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ellen-snortland-and-gavin-de-becker/rites-of-spring_b_210154.html
How parents can support defensive literacy
1. Does your daughter's high school have self-defense training?
2. When you visit a campus in the spring, or even the fall when you leave your student, insist that the campus NOT depend solely on "rescue" strategies for safety.
3. Ask your student to promise they will find a designated sober party-person.
4. Does the school have adrenalin based, realistic scenario self-defense training?
For the full blog, go to Ellen Snortland and Gavin de Becker. 2011. "Rites of Spring" Huffington Post, November 17. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ellen-snortland-and-gavin-de-becker/rites-of-spring_b_210154.html
Monday, June 1, 2015
Voice and Community: Take Back The Night
Having events like Take Back The Night usually give me some
sense of conflict – very glad that we are recognizing their importance in our
society, but also horrified that they are necessary. Having an epidemic of domestic and sexual
violence perpetrated against women is bad enough; the fact that not enough
attention is paid to finding remedies and solutions to this problem that we
need wonderful and purposeful events like this to publicize the need for action
is, at times, beyond comprehension.
In IMPACT courses, I regularly meet female survivors of gender-based
violence. As I listen to their stories
and work with these individuals, I’m always impressed with their tenacity,
courage, and strength. Other things
become apparent as well, such as the pervasiveness of this problem in our
world, and the unconscionable depths of human behavior seen in the perpetration
of these crimes.
From the stories I hear and read, two things of note rise to
the front for me in regard to those who commit these crimes. They rely heavily on two things – silence and
isolation. Sexual predators use these
tools to maximum advantage. That is why
events such as Take Back The Night are so powerful and so necessary. Take Back The Night emphasizes the opposite:
voice and community. Voice to acknowledge
and call our attention to these issues, and community to set a standard where
human dignity and respect are at such a level that we can someday no longer
have to worry about sexual predatory violence.
It is my sincere hope that we can give voice to those who need and
desire it, and role model a community that no longer tolerates the commission
of these types of crimes.
There are many people who can give you, in far greater
detail and context than I, why men commit acts of rape, sexual harassment, and
violence against women. But I will offer
one thought on this subject: they do it
because they think they can. And if we
create an environment where voice is used to call out inappropriate behavior,
to name bias when it is apparent, to speak for those who cannot speak for
themselves, and community is used to give strength to the individual, to end
the behavior of male sexual entitlement, and constantly strive for the greater
good, perhaps we can make a difference.
Starting here, starting now, we can make a difference.
Rob Babcock, IMPACT Chicago Suited Instructor
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