In the 1970s, self-defense training was an integral part of the
women’s movement (Matthews, 1994; Searles & Berger, 1987). As rape victim services were professionalized,
the focus of anti-rape work shifted from “stopping rape” to “managing rape,”
marginalizing feminist self-defense (Matthews, 1994; Searles & Berger,
1987). This marginalization has continued
not only because of the shift in focus, but also because police and traditional
martial arts programs began offering women’s self-defense programs and the
feminist focus of women’s self-defense has been overshadowed by and confused
with fear-based, non-women-centered self-defense programming. As social justice, empowerment-focused, and feminist-based
self-defense instructor Carmel Drewes says, “even though empowerment self-defense is documented to reduce sexual assault (Senn et all plus years and years of anecdotal
evidence), it has been completely shut out of federal sexual assault prevention
efforts through the DOJ and the CDC.
This fall a small group of feminist self-defense
instructors are gathering in Washington D.C. to kick-off a campaign to bring
empowerment self-defense to the forefront of the anti-rape movement. Because
many of these experts work for nonprofits, they do not have organizational
resources to travel so they have set up a gofund me to raise money to support
those of the group with limited resources. Carmel says: “If you can support us at any level, or help spread the word,
you'll be helping a group of us meet this fall to galvanize a national strategy
to include Empowerment Self Defense in all types of violence prevention efforts
and research.” To make a donation or read more about the Empowerment
Self-Defense Advocacy Coalition, click here.
Martha Thompson
IMPACT Chicago Instructor
References
Matthews,
N. A. (1994). Confronting rape: The feminist anti-rape movement and the
state. London, England: Routledge.
Searles,
P., & Berger, R. J. (1987). The feminist self-defense movement: A case
study. Gender & Society, 1, 61-84.
Senn, C.Y., M. Eliasziw, P.C. Barate, W.E. Thurston, I.R. Newby-Clark, H.L. Radtke, and K.L. Hobden. (2015). Efficacy of a Sexual Assault Resistance Program for University. New England Journal of Medicine 372:2326-2335.
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