Kongressprogramm

Unter dem Motto „Sicher leben in Stadt und Land“ findet am 16. und 17. April 2012 im Internationalen Congress Centrum München unter der Schirmherrschaft des bayerischen Ministerpräsidenten Horst Seehofer und des Münchner Oberbürgermeisters Christian Ude der 17. Deutsche Präventionstag statt.

Sexual Harassment, Sexual Assault and Women’s Right to the City: Lessons from the Gender Inclusive Cities Programme

Abstract:
GICP was a 3-year programme to promote change that would enable women to enjoy equal access to public spaces and exercise their right to the city. Funded by the UN Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women from 2009-11 and with NGO-led projects in Argentina, India, Russia and Tanzania, it focused on reducing sexual harassment and assault. Evidence collected indicates these are global problems and a powerful restriction on women’s freedom, the effect of which is intensified when gender intersects with factors associated with marginalisation or disadvantage, such as ethnicity or homelessness. There is however little recognition of the problem by men, public institutions or services that have a central role in tackling it. GICP aimed to change this by increasing awareness of the problem, changing individual attitudes and behaviours, and influencing the ways cities are planned, managed and serviced.

GICP had three inter-related workstreams. The first involved compilation of a persuasive evidence base to show the nature, scale and consequences of the problem. The second was the involvement of local women to identify needs, develop initiatives and exert influence on others. The third was the establishment of partnerships with key stakeholders, such as local government, to deliver interventions. It has shown that small civil society organisations can play a vital role in delivering interventions and that there are additional benefits for women if NGOs adopt a feminist approach that is consciousness-raising and empowering. However, improvements, which depend on changes by women, men and institutions, require longer-term support if they are to be sustained.
Vita:
Dr Sohail Husain is Director of Analytica Consulting, a UK-based provider of research and advocacy services on community safety, violence reduction and justice reform. From 1976-89 he was Lecturer in Geography at Southampton University (UK) and Visiting Professor at Hamburg University (Germany) in 1984. While his teaching and research interests were initially focused on urban analysis and quantitative techniques, he became increasingly involved in community safety and violence reduction. In 1989 he joined Crime Concern, a new NGO dedicated to promoting social crime prevention and developing effective interventions, and was its Deputy CEO from 2001-05, playing a lead role in its research and technical assistance programmes. In 2005 Sohail set up Analytica and has subsequently undertaken assignments in many parts of the world (including Bosnia, Canada, New Zealand, Serbia, South Africa) for national governments and international organisations to promote effective action, develop resources and tools, support project design and implementation, and to undertake evaluations. He was evaluator of the UNTF-funded Gender Inclusive Cities Programme (with projects in Argentina, India, Russia and Tanzania) from 2009-11 and Senior Evaluation Adviser to UN Women’s Global Programme for Safe Cities for Women and Girls (with projects in Ecuador, Egypt, India, Papua New Guinea and Rwanda) from 2010.

Downloads

17. April 2012
09:00 - 10:00 Uhr
Internationales Forum
Raum: Saal 12b